Talk:Egalitarianism/Archive 1
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Comment
The author is seriously confusing two very separate doctrines of egalitarianism in addition to making a hasty generalization about broad agreement in the following paragraph.
“[M]ost Marxists now agree that communism can only be achieved if the coercive powers of redistribution needed during the transitional period are vested in a democratic body whose powers are limited by various checks and balances, in order to prevent abuse. In other words, they argue that political egalitarianism is indispensable to material egalitarianism. Meanwhile, other defenders of material egalitarianism have rejected Marxist communism in favor of such views as Libertarian socialism, which does not advocate the transitional use of the state as a means of redistribution.”
Marxists are Socialists historically and should not be confused with Communists. Communism is a variety of egalitarianism which was originally advocated by Lenin and his Bolsheviks and later became codified after the formation of the Communist International and the formation of the Soviet state.
Although Marxism and Democratic Socialism were influential in much of Lenin’s early thinking there were historical rifts which kept these men at ideological and philosophical odds. Moreover, Lenin strove to expand the ideological gap between what were essentially popular social doctrines of Western Europe (Marxism and Democratic Socialism) and his own attitudes; Marxism, and more importantly the popular Democratic Socialism of that time, did not offer a practical or egalitarian solution to the people of then Czarist Russia in Lenin’s mind. Lenin, searching for a specific solution which might close the nationalistic and institutionalized disparities in Czarist Russia between the landless peasant class and the aristocratic Kulaks executed the October Revolution and later the Decree on Land.
The most notable difference between Marxism as theory and Communism as history are the people seeking egalitarian distribution of property and wealth. Marxism is very specific when it predicts that the working class of any industrialized, capitalistic nation will be responsible for the overthrow and replacement of a plutocratic minority resulting in an egalitarian distribution of wealth and possession.
Since Czarist Russia had very little industrialization prior to the formation of the Soviet state and was generally protectionist in what foreign economic policy it had the definition provided by Marx and his followers is not appropriate. Moreover, those who participated in this attempt at social transformation from dictatorial monarchy to progressive communism were not industrial workers (then afforded marginally more social, political and physical wealth than the average Russian peasant), but agrarian people living without possession.
It’s possibly most important to note that Lenin, after the formation of the Communist International and the Russian Communist Party further refined his political philosophy by subtlety altering the words he used to describe the Russian Communist movement. The expansionistic and often corrupt outcome of what started as a Communist (Bolshevik) revolt intent on creating an egalitarian society based on redistribution of property through means provided in Lenin’s (non-Marxist) doctrine became Soviet in practice. The practices of former Soviet states cannot be considered Marxist by any stretch of the imagination and generally fail the definition of Communism as defined by Lenin.
The conclusion of this article is muddled by the definition of “Marxist communism.” How can “defenders of material egalitarianism” reject anything in favor of “Libritarian socialism” when the predicate for this choice does not exists? Would Marxists be at all interested in the historical consequences of what was in practice a Communist revolt which later became a dictatorial régime hindered by its own inherent corruption and abuse? Why?
Much of the information presented later in the article tends to run toward the American-centric and nationalistic and should be revised as well, but this collection of fallacy is all I have time for today. —Preceding unsigned comment added by WonkotheSane (talk • contribs) 01:31, 20 April 2005 (UTC
Definitely biased and a little off
--82.211.210.191 20:19, 24 May 2006 (UTC):
This article certainly seems biased against material egalitarianism. I must admit I have not read the entire article and discussion, but just one of the first lines strikes me:
Material egalitarianism stresses equality with respect to material possessions and therefore inevitably a disregard for property rights.
Is it just me or is the conclusion very biased? As far as I can see it, a community's wealth could be easily shared amongst its people, while still regarding for property rights. What you can't have is a free trade, where individuals earn wealth from others. A property right regarding material egalitarianistic society that I could think of is in a nomadic tribe: each person has their personal, life essential properties like clothes, waterflask etc. but the total material wealth of the tribe is shared.
- Might I point out that the following in the first paragraphy of this entry appears to be heavy on the weasel words and it is unreferenced:
- In actual practice, one may be considered an egalitarian in most areas listed above, even if not subscribing to equality in every possible area of individual difference. For example, one might support equal rights in race matters but not in gender issues, or vice versa.
GeeOh (talk) 06:25, 18 March 2008 (UTC)
Please sign your contributions
Ladies and gentlemen, whatever you have to say, please --Peter Knutsen 16:45, 23 October 2005 (UTC)sign your pieces (and do it in such a way that it is --Peter Knutsen 16:45, 23 October 2005 (UTC)clear where each piece begins and ends). You "sign" by typing two dashes and four tildes, or by clickling on the "sign" button above the edit window ("your signature with timestamp"), which automatically inserts the required characters. It is impossible to follow debates like this when it is not clear where one person's text ends and the next person's text begins!! Secondly, anonymous opinions are, as a pretty damn good rule of thumb, taken much less seriously than signed opinions (even if you don't have to sign under your real name, as I do). --Peter Knutsen 16:45, 23 October 2005 (UTC)
roffle
So Lenin invented (or "originated", rather) Communism? I'll have to remember that next time I read Das Manifest der Kommunistischen Partei.
I'm a Librarian Socialist myself. =snort=
--Cheburashka 04:53, 30 April 2006 (UTC)
So is just about every other nerd on the interwebs. I myself am a pro-capitalist communistParp555 (talk) 23:36, 4 February 2008 (UTC)
_____________________
“human rights, which promote… legal egalitarianism...”
No. Not if legal egalitarianism means equal under the law. Anatole France commented that equality under law means the rich as well as the poor are forbidden to sleep under bridges. A Chinese activist recently made the same comment about new laws: the beggar has the same property rights in his stick as the rich man in his BMW. In short, human rights are being ignored.
That list of egalitarianisms is not really coherent. It is haphazardly overlapping. For example does gender egalitarianism mean legal, moral, political, or material equality? The same question applies to “luck” and “racial” and would apply to “animal” and “inter-galactic”.
“Because "all men are created equal", each person is to be treated equally under the law. Originally this statement excluded women, slaves and other groups…”
No. Technically “men” does exclude women but that was the language of the time; if you’d asked them the framers would have said that of course women were included. I don’t see where the statement excludes slaves or any other group.
Overall there is a confusion of practice and theory in the article which seems to have prompted the long and inaccurate anonymous contribution above. Maybe get the theory sorted then look at the practice - or put the practice in a history entry. No doubt Marxism and communism are important but there seems to be an unwarranted emphasis on them. The anti-Soviet propaganda is in the wrong place, too. This emphasis may be because “egalitarianism”, on its own and without further qualification, means the left’s equality of outcome.
On the theory it seems to me all the listed items could be subsumed under one of:
- equality of opportunity which is the neoliberal preference
- equality of outcome which is the preference of the left
- political equality which is the preference of the powerless
- equality under the law, (also equal treatment of equal people which might be a different thing) which is the preference of traditional conservatives
It would be solid theory to show why and how the first two are head to head, and how the last is the pragmatic resolution of that conflict.
- Pepper 150.203.227.130 06:54, 13 August 2006 (UTC)
NPOV tag
I tagged the article because there is a pervasive slant to the article, favoring material redistribution. The article states that Marxism could only be achieved if there where no one with special powers to redistribute. But what it doesn't mention is that in order to get material egalitarianism, you give up equal liberty. Liberty and material equality are mutually exclusive. Unless you believe that those that have more, did not earn it. And that is wher the slant is. -- Dullfig 21:33, 20 January 2007 (UTC)
Re: Changes and Revision
The article, as it was, had been tagged as needing Wikifying, plus Dullfig's correct NPOV tag. The changes were a serious attempt to address both issues. New material was added, citations provided, and the disproportionately large Marxism section deleted. Perhaps some of it is salvageable--if so, please consider reworking it and making it concise.
Several of the Christianity articles include this in their */See Also/* since Christian Egalitarianism has become somewhat of a hot topic. The introductory revisions attempt to show that the topic is philosophically inclusive and even speaks to this fairly new application of egalitarianism.Afaprof01 04:18, 11 February 2007 (UTC)
Nonegalitarian POV
"Nonegalitarian thought and conduct often leads to injustice, resulting in such things as abuse of power, taking from others freedom, dignity, resources, and even life itself."
What relevance does the above have to the definition of nonegalitarian? It only expresses one POV of nonegalitarianism, characterizing it as unjust and basically wrong. Anyone object to removing it? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Matt Gerber (talk • contribs) 19:38, 22 March 2007 (UTC).
Biblical egalatarian view ?
The comments below the quote of Galatians 3:28 is biased. There are other possible interpretations and applications of this scripture. This scripture may be interpreted as Christ viewing everyone on an equal moral ground, having nothing to do with church duties or authority, or whether or not a wife should be submissive to her husband. Wikipedia is supposed to have unbiased entries, not to convince others that your religious belief's are the correct one. Even if you were to try to prove equality of men and women with other scriptures, you could not say that that is what was meant also by Galatians (spurious correlation). Scientific fact is considered as such by what is called "peer review"; general agreement among educated people in the field. If you wish to express religious Ideas that are widely disagreed with and therefore subject to interpretation, then it does not belong on Wikipedia; expressed as though it is fact.
- This is clearly stated as being the interpretation of "Christian egalitarians." It now acknowledges your point that there are other possible interpretations and applications of this scripture. Thanks for pointing out the need for clarification re: Gal. 3:28. Afaprof01 21:21, 25 March 2007 (UTC)
Why is there no mention of the Christian discrimination of gays? The article professes that the christian egalitarian view holds all to be equal, this is obviously not so
hunter-gatherer egalitarianism
I added this as I thought it provided a non-modern example (although the research was conducted on modern groups). I'm not sure if it would be more appropriate in a subfield of egalitarianism,, but I thought it would be interesting contribution. Saxonwhittle 14:27, 5 April 2007 (UTC)
Nonegalitarianism
the line "nonegalitarian thought and conduct often lead to injustice, resulting in such things as abuse of power, taking from others freedom, dignity, resources and even life itself." All without citation is clearly a strong POV. Clearly the previous lines about what constitute nonegalitarianism are basicly correct (that some people for whatever reason should be treated preferentially) though they really ought to have citations. But just stating as one of only two or three sentences on the subject that the view of nonegalitarianism thought and conduct often lead to injustice is a obvious POV. Nonegalitarianism conduct might lead to injustice, but it doesn't have to in theory. For example treating a person differently because their homeless, a drunk or drug addict or uneducated is clearly nonegalitarian in conduct. But is it injustice?, it might very well be but that doesn't mean it is. And its clearly not depriving a person of freedom, resources or even life iself to just treat a person differently without actually doing something to them. It may be depriving the person of dignity to do so, but that depends on the person him/her self. If a person does not feel there dignity was affected than it wasn't, dignity doesn't physically exist, so its all based upon personal percepttion. But even if you can say that all nonegalitarianism action does at length deprive people of this or that, it doesn't follow that nonegalitarianism thoght leads to any of the things mentioned. Regardless, without citations its a obvious POV. Colin 8 21:34, 8 April 2007 (UTC)
WikiProject class rating
This article was automatically assessed because at least one WikiProject had rated the article as stub, and the rating on other projects was brought up to Stub class. BetacommandBot 03:57, 10 November 2007 (UTC)
Egalitarian societies
Should this be its own article, or should the section here be expanded and elevated in the article hierarchy? The fact is that, apart from ideology and utopian movements, the question of whether or not human societies have been egalitarian, and how egalitarian should be defined (scientifically, as applying to an observed phenomenon) has been a matter of considerable debate. I am willing to work on it, although not a lot right now. My question though concerns the structure of the article. If what I propose to add (for example drawing heavily on the works of Morton fried, Eleanor Leacock, and Elman Service) goes into this article, then the introduction would have to be rewritten to say that "egalitarianism" refers both to an ideology and to a kind of political system. As I suggested, the alternative would be to have a completely separate article, in which case the paragraph in this article, referring to anthropology, should just become a link. Slrubenstein | Talk 17:11, 22 July 2008 (UTC)
- I'd suggest creating a new article, assuming a variety of egalitarian societies would eventually be discussed. Modern hunter-gatherer groups, if seen as mini societies, would fit in perfectly. --Scandum (talk) 18:16, 22 July 2008 (UTC)
Unconscious racism
Studies have shown that much racism is unconscious and that many people who perceive themselves to be egalitarian can often secretly or unconsciously harbour racist attitudes. This could maybe be included on an eventual criticism section in the article. [1] ADM (talk) 17:47, 21 January 2009 (UTC)
Christian Eg...
The last sentence under this heading on the main page seems to be a little off grammatically. Also it seems to be non NPOV. Am I wrong here? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 64.66.99.129 (talk) 15:53, 22 April 2009 (UTC)
Quality of Criticism
User Mtcruitt gave an out of place comment calling into question the validity of the criticism section (please see http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Egalitarianism&oldid=277970080). I believe the first two paragraphs give a neutral description of contrary thoughts of Egalitarianism. Granted it is tamer than 'Criticism' sections I've read for other topics, but I think this falls within WP:NPOV. If I were to take criticism to strictly mean 'adverse analysis', then I might agree with Mtcruitt, and would see about better presenting the 3rd paragraph.
What do you think? --FuturePrefect (talk) 02:38, 18 March 2009 (UTC)
- Hmm. Well, given that the current title of that section is actually "Criticism and support", that third paragraph doesn't appear to be particularly out of line. However, since ther is an entire article on the subject just above that, I feel the "support" part is kind of unnecessary and should be limited just to criticsm. I don't know if there's any Wikipedia standard on the subject. If it were reduced to just a criticism section, that third paragraph should probably be removed althogether as it's more in favor of egalitarianism than anyhting. Perhaps if we still wanted to include it, it could be moved to another section.
- To go off on a slight tangent, I'd call into question the legitimacy of any study that claims to connect egalitarian views, environmental policies, and premature death rates. It seems like it might have ulterior(sp?) motivations. But that's more of a personal gripe than anything. While it does appear to be a correlation/causation issue, I haven't studied the source and have no real evidence against it.97.97.94.51 (talk) 22:36, 3 June 2009 (UTC)
Religious Egalitarianism
I suppose I could edit the article myself, but I'm no expert on the subject, and don't plan on becoming one any time soon, so here are some notes for future editors:
Under the Christian Egalitarianism section, no sources are cited, and there are multiple spelling and grammar errors that need to be rectified. Also, I would question the author's full neutrality or knowledge on the subject: how the "church" deals with these matters can be called into question based on the fact that there are many Christian churches (ie. Protestant, Catholic, Orthodox, Anglican, etc.), and they may differ substantially in their "interpretations of scripture". Also, I would shy away from using the term "in scripture", because a non-Christian or even a non-practicing Christian may be confused by the term (which has as many meanings and morphs as their are churches).
Secondly, although I can neither refute or approve the section to do with Islam, the section might be re-arranged to place the historical ("mysogenistic") content before the "modern-day" context, so as to be less confusing in its intent. Also, the "objective" parts of this article are uncited, while the "subjective" parts of the article are cited. If somebody could verify these bits and add some citations and specifics ("some people" is just not good enough), and maybe flesh it out a little bit more, that would be darn handy! Cronanius (talk) 07:08, 19 April 2010 (UTC)
Georgism
We should put in something about Georgism which is a philosophy that states that everything in nature is a common good, and should be treated as though it belongs to everyone equally. Not only is this linked to political egalitarianism, but it is also analogous to other justifications for Egalitarianism. Egalitarianism might be defined as "either we all own rights, or none of us do, **but either way we are equal**." Just a random thought from a student. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 93.97.7.90 (talk) 06:15, 23 May 2010 (UTC)
Merger proposal
I think that Equality of treatment should be merged with this article, as it is essentially the same thing. Do people agree? Tkn20 (talk) 18:07, 5 January 2008 (UTC)
- "Equality of treatment" has never had references; I'm redirecting it to this article. -Yamara ✉ 06:55, 2 June 2008 (UTC)
- Equality of treatment is not synonymous with egalitarianism. Equality of treatment is essentially a matter of equal political rights (including civil rights and economic rights). Egalitarianism is a political philosophy that emphasises the equal distribution of wealth among the population. The paradigm of an egalitarian society is one where every person receives identical income or has identical wealth. BlueRobe (talk) 23:52, 17 July 2010 (UTC)
Mad Buck Gibson
This user has been banned as a sock of banned User:Grundle2600, and I have reverted his changes because banned users just don't get to post. I have no opinion on the merits of the changes. PhGustaf (talk) 02:36, 8 October 2010 (UTC)
Christian Egalitarianism is too prominent in this article
This article should focus on egalitarianism as a system of thought/philosophy. Christian egalitarianism as an example within this should be less prominent than it is here (or possibly removed completely) and the use of passages of scripture to support arguments should definitely be removed since they are not authoritative and simply incite the kind of futile religious argument we see in the next discussion topic. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Flaky Pastry (talk • contribs) 04:17, 16 July 2009 (UTC)
- I completely agree -- egalitarianism in western culture precedes Christianity and is firmly rooted in classical antiquity. Placing "Christian egalitarianism" or indeed religious egalitarianism in a prominent place in the article emphasizes religious understandings of society at the expense of other points of view.
Jon EP1 (talk) 19:02, 6 April 2010 (UTC)
- Christian egalitarianism should be simply mentioned here by way of referral to its own article by that title. Some time ago we split it into two so that this one could be secular egalitarianism from a philosophical viewpoint and Christian egalitarianism could specifically represent non-egalitarian Christian viewpoints such as Complementarianism and Patriarchy. I will be glad to begin work on moving in that direction unless we have valid objections. Thanks for pointing this out. ─AFA Prof01 (talk) 20:29, 6 April 2010 (UTC)
I'd say it isn't prominent enough. Man's view of his fellow man is never going to ascend further than what he comprehends of his creator's view of his fellow man. I would be curious to see the position of more other faiths in this area (though I laughed at the notion of Islam being egalitarian - wasn't I taught of the "brother against brother" motto?); Christianity is likely the most in flux on this issue. —Preceding unsigned comment added by MathInclined (talk • contribs) 05:59, 11 August 2010 (UTC)
I agree ""inalienable rights endowed by their Creator," in the moral principles by which they lived, and which formed the basis for their legacy." for example is exclusive to Christian egalitarianism. As an atheist i cannot agree on this yet call myself egalitarian. Also Christianity is not as "in flux" with this issue as Buddhism, for example. There is nothing in Christianity that dictates all peoples equality, yet in Buddhism this is the fundamental core - that all living beings is connected and equal. Yet i oppose to subscribe to the idea that a religious adaption of this idea, makes the idea religious. There are a lot of secular ideas in religion and this is one of them. Religion may add the "created by god" argument. Yet the opposition claims that man was created different and that treating man equal is in defiance of this. If that is true, than i am happy to defy god. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 213.112.38.78 (talk) 18:38, 21 October 2010 (UTC)
This is the article about SECULIAR Egalitarianism, as explained above. How does this debate have any relevancy? Christians should go to the Christian Egalitarianism article and debate there. This is not the place to discuss this. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 213.112.38.78 (talk) 18:47, 21 October 2010 (UTC)
Study section
The quality of the study seems suspect if the students were simply GIVEN money to represent EARNED income. I don't understand how that is supposed to show anything, other than the willingness to give up money that had little real value to them (because it was had without effort or perceived right.) Maybe it makes sense to someone who thinks money is distributed at random in a normal society, but that's not how it works.184.100.12.32 (talk) 00:46, 15 January 2011 (UTC)
Why did Jesus consider Gentiles to be DOGS if there is Egalitarianism in Christianity?
I do think sometimes that Wikipedia is a Christian Missionary free encyclopedia to evangelize the mass, my I remind you that,The gift of god Jesus Christ say in Matthew 15:22-28
Dumb statement. You are an anti-Christian bigot. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 70.240.74.85 (talk) 16:41, 8 April 2010 (UTC) "I was sent [ONLY] to the lost of the house of Israel." .......It is not right to take the children's bread and throw it to the dogs
Is This Egalitarian statement? Calling Gentile Dogs not even Human?
The Sad Part Here Is That Jesus Agreed To help This Poor Women ONLY After She Agreed To Accept This Insult From The Mouth of Jesus.
She said: Yes, Lord: but even the dogs take the bits of food that fall to the flood from under their masters' table.
This Poor Women, At The Hands of Jesus, Had to Crawl and Accept This Insult before He Decided To Help Her.
Let Us see what Paul says
{Now I want you to realize that the head of every “Man” is “Christ”, and the head of the “Woman” is “Man”, and the head of “Christ” is “God”. [1 Cor 11:3]} where is the Egalitarianism ?
I am also left wondering as to whether the Bible even makes any explicit promises to its female adherents.
I am unaware of any, and raisethis in light of for example the following Biblical statements:
“ A man …. is the image and glory of God, but the woman is the glory of man. ….. Neither was man created for (the sake of) woman, but woman for man”. {1 Corinthians 11:7-9}
The Bible further emphatically states (contrary to your passionate wishes) that a total of:
“ … 144,000 men … who did not defile themselves with women” will ultimately be with Jesus. (All of whom being exclusively from the 12 tribes of Israel). {Revelations 7:5-8, 14:4}
This is in line with Matthew 19:28 which again clearly indicates that in the Hereafter (as on earth (Matthew 10:5-7; 15:24, 26)), Jesus’s role is exclusively associated with the 12 tribes of Israel.
I am unaware of any Biblical passage which specifically promises “any of the gentiles”, whether males or females (even those ‘undefiled by women’), “that they will actually enter Paradise”.
This comparative Biblical silence on these crucial issues is ‘spiritually deflating’, and strongly indicates that there is actually “no reward in waiting” for gentiles who adhere to the Israelite’s exclusive covenant (viz. the Bible Isaac and his Blood line alone GEN 17:19)).
There is NO Egalitarianism in Christianity,Please correct me if I am wrong by providing Biblical proof which explicitly states otherwise.
This whole (above) discussion is completely irrelevant.BlakeAllred (talk) 22:29, 28 September 2011 (UTC)
81.153.68.112 (talk) 17:27, 14 January 2008 (UTC)
- Well you might check Christian Egalitarianism. I'd say it would be getting pretty quickly into original research trying to deny it here. It's certainly not accepted amongst all Christians, but here is a verse that is hard to parse any other way.
- 'There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus'
- – Galatians 3:28
- 70.253.139.70 (talk) 06:05, 13 August 2008 (UTC)
Jesus says NOTHING Galatians 3:28, it is word of Paul the DEVIL ROM 7:21
Jesus says to his Followers { Those who LOVES Me Follow my TEACHINGS}John 14:24 ....Not paul's peter or banana....... but ONLY his own teachings.... I was sent[ONLY]to the lost sheep of the house of “ISRAEL “….. It is not right to take the children's bread and throw it to the “DOGS."Matt 15:22-28 ..
..That is JESUS's TEACHINGS
Notice also that [[[ The word is ISRAEL blood descendants of man named Jacob……… NOT JEWS...coz there are always GOY fake Jews whom are NOT blood related to Jacob, like TODAY ASHKINAZI,or Sephardic JEWS ]]]
82.5.167.237 (talk) 12:47, 27 October 2008 (UTC) _________________________
An encyclopedia should be based on absolute undisputable fact. Since the bible is not fact and can not be proven referencing it in whole or in part, should be dissallowed in an encyclopedia.71.171.156.21 (talk) 20:38, 20 January 2009 (UTC)
The question posed ignores the context and tone of Jesus's statement. He exposes an existing cultural bias held by the religious leaders at the time; it exposes the prejudice before a mixed crowd... kinda like talking about the elephant in the room. If a preferentially-classed person mentions the elephant, would you automatically denounce him as a racist? —Preceding unsigned comment added by MathInclined (talk • contribs) 05:52, 11 August 2010 (UTC)
potential resource
The Age of Equality: The Twentieth Century in Economic Perspective by Richard Pomfret, Reviewed by Richard N. Cooper November/December 2011 Foreign Affairs 99.19.44.155 (talk) 14:58, 8 January 2012 (UTC)
Merrian-Webster definition misread?
Merriam-Webster might have been misread to imply that the third definition only applies to the early Christians. The "<" and ">" symbols are simply used to enclose an example use, the examples are not intended to be restrictive. (The OED, however only has two definitions.) Since any change might involve some article restructuring, I'll just make the comment. Leptus Froggi (talk) 03:56, 29 July 2012 (UTC)
Article requires serious attention
This article is of pretty poor quality currently and could use a complete revision. The division of the notion of "egalitarianism" into three categories, political, philosophical and religious, is questionable: why are these three fields the relevant fields? I suggest scrapping that distinction or at least moving it to a position of very low importance within the article. Similarly, the reliance on Kristoff as an authority of egalitarianism in Islam is incredibly weak. The "religious" overtones of the article remain entirely too prominent. Further, the article as a whole does very little to illuminate the meaning of the term 'egalitarianism.' Surely we can do better! Jon EP1 (talk) 18:02, 2 July 2010 (UTC) I am inclined to agree, this article is hard to understand and follow in a few ways. I don't offer the answers, as I don't have them. But for example in the concepts of equality in every society, of my knowledge, particularly in bible and Christian teachings for example, I see we are taught that all men (women included) are created equal, but no where do I see the suggestion that this equality can not be lost, or ceded by and individual, or group. In all societies serious crime conviction carries a probability that some equality will be lost, or impaired either permanently, or for a time. The Bible does not preclude this treatment at society's behest, merely that the judgement process be fair and equal for anyone so convicted. Likewise wealth accumulation is only precluded where breach of other's equality is involved in the process. Likewise a person is equally free to dispose his income as he pleases and that is an equal principal universally applied. So if one skimps and scrapes, or excells in labor output, education, investing skills etc, or shere lucky break, why not be unequal from the persons who are boozing gamblers, irresponsibly disposing of ever penny he gets? I could say more but the contributors should have my drift here, and I claim no specific wisdom otherwise on the point. I opened the article to better acquaint me with its meanings and leave none the better informed. --Robbygay (talk) 01:16, 30 August 2010 (UTC)
- There seems to be some POV campers on this article. That will be the first barrier. Basileias (talk) 00:13, 3 July 2010 (UTC)
- I think a mention of the areas where egalitarianism is applied may be relevant in the intitial description for the purpose of expanding the definition and use of the word. For example, "The areas that the egalitarianist principle are most commonly applied to are socially, politically, or economically related sciences that affect a group of people." I see how those areas can be excluded and there still be a crisp definition ("Egalitarianism (derived from the French word égal, meaning "equal"), is a principle based on the philosophy that all people are equal within the sphere that the egalitarian principle is being applied.
- The use of the Declaration of Independence may have [1], but it is not an example of a document that embraces social egalitarianism.
- My question is should the initial introduction of a word, subject, principle et. al. be restricted, if possible, to simply a definition with no distinction between why a user might search an encyclopedic reference as opposed to a dictionary?
- I have another question: I may be looking at this wrong, but it would seem to be appropriate to, as a minor issue, note any examples of societies or groups that have attempted to create a climate of egalitarianism either socially, religiously, politically, or within some other context. Do you agree?LovinItAll (talk) 16:10, 27 July 2010 (UTC)
I haven't studied the article in great detail but was offput by the initial sentence, calling egalitarianism a "trend of thought." To my horror I see the same phrase is used in the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. The phrase seems both amateurish and judgmental. Surely an -ism in the political/philosophical realm should first be defined as a "belief" or "doctrine" of some sort. Whether it is trending or not, and in which direction, can be dealt with (and debated) elsewhere. Frappyjohn (talk) 07:51, 24 October 2010 (UTC)
There is also apparently an issue with maintaining an understanding of what the difference is between 'equality of opportunity' and 'equality of outcome' which shows most in the Randian quote, which is clearly talking about the latter. The supposed opposing view is discussing equality of opportunity, which actually is likely perfectly fine from a Randian viewpoint. In fact, it might be best if the article is ultimately rewritten with a short summary of the types of equality and different schools of egalitarianism--with links to the articles on them, where such exist--with a discussion of general criticism & the introduction covering the general concept behind egalitarianism before discussing its different forms. 75.177.89.14 (talk) 06:17, 22 April 2012 (UTC)
I agree, the article does need serious attention. The entire reception section is based on the notion that no state exists, which is not true at all. Equal opportunity exists when there are fair rules for the social contract between the individual and the rest of society. Most of the article completely avoids most social theory, which is precisely what the concept is trying to describe! Tyraz (talk) 13:42, 31 May 2013 (UTC)
References
- ^ "subverted the dominant social doctrine of the time"
Should certain studies be included in this article?
There is currently a disagreement as to whether certain studies which do not mention egalitarianism by name, but nonetheless appear to discuss the same subject should be included in the article. DavidLeighEllis (talk) 23:05, 12 December 2013 (UTC)
- If it actually is on topic then reliable secondary sources will cover this aspect. Hcobb (talk) 00:33, 13 December 2013 (UTC)
- I dont quite understand, two of those studies do appear to mention egalitarianism by name? Thom2002 (talk) 12:10, 15 December 2013 (UTC)
- Hi -- I have not edited this article but ran across the RfC on another page. I looked at the "Sprit Level" book, which contains at least 15 mentions of the word "egalitarian", and seems to be talking directly about both the economic and political forms of egalitarianism discussed in the article. The citation is definitely relevant. The NPR cite regarding the Swiss study is definitely relevant -- it mentions the word egalitarianism explicitly. I couldn't see the full Nature article, but the summaries in the press make i sound relevant. It would seem to me that removing these on the grounds of irrelevance is mistaken. Reading the section that was removed, I think the editor who removed it may have seen it as somehow not integrated with the rest of the article. And it wasn't integrated, though it easily could be. First, I think the subtitle of the section "Studies" was a little vague and made it hard to understand what was supposed to be in the section, what it was supposed to become. It looks like the section was supposed to discuss how the sciences (social sciences, biology, etc.) look at these philosophical ideas. The section could have been called "Science research concerning egalitarianism," and that might have made more clear what it was for. The Spirit Level book appears to use techniques from the social sciences to answer the question of whether or not greater egalitarianism would help human societies achieve certain goals. The other studies are using experimental techniques from biology and the social sciences to determine if people have a tendencies to act in an egalitarian way. These are all legitimate subjects to include in the article. If I could make a suggestion, the article could also benefit from a section on attempts to apply egalitarian principles, such as the Federation of Egalitarian Communities, or more mainstream attempts, such as are described in "The Fourth Great Awakening and the Future of Egalitarianism" By Robert William Fogel. This might fit into a "History" subsection, of the sort which is a part of many "-ism" articles. David.thompson.esq (talk) 06:18, 19 December 2013 (UTC)
Egalitarianism is self-contradictory
All egalitarians are essentially liars because they say that they want equality but in fact they want to be in a position above non-egalitarians and able to enforce egalitarianism upon non-egalitarians. Which is a hierarchy and thus itself non-egalitarian. Hence "Egalitarianism is self-contradictory". LeapUK (talk) 09:10, 27 February 2014 (UTC)
- Wikipedia is not a discussion forum. Of course, all those who say Wikipedia is not a discussion forum are liars, because in saying that they are discussing your post. Rick Norwood (talk) 19:50, 27 February 2014 (UTC)
New Testament
Shouldn't it read New Testament, not the Bible in general? The Old Testament was hardly advocating egalitarianism. I would also like to point out that it's great to see that the article has been hammered out a bit more to being well rounded out of different belief systems, although shouldn't there be a secular view point? 99.54.188.176 (talk) 19:39, 2 April 2014 (UTC)
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Equalism?
This section was added by an anonymous editor, totally uncited and with no summary. Nevertheless I think it's salvageable as part of the article but A) the claims in the new section need references and B) the citation of the term equalism in the introductory sentence of the article should contain a cite for the claim that the words are synonyms, not a cite that equalism is an alternative to feminism. Awarenode (talk) 16:29, 24 August 2016 (UTC)
The edit seems a poorly-veiled attack against feminism, which experiences no such broad turning to "equalism" to the best of my knowledge. I suggest that "Equalism" merely cite or refer to the Wikitionary definition. If one really wants to press the issue, "sometimes offered as an alternative to for instance 'feminism'" could be a more neutral phrasing. At any rate, much better citation is needed. Desolationofsmug (talk) 20:24, 19 September 2016 (UTC)
I just created an account to completely rewrite this passage because it was SO bad. I personally don't think it should be on this page, and it probably should be mentioned under criticism or something on feminism. I added a few citations, but it's very hard to find any meaningful sources for pro-equalism. They seem to be either very wishy-washy and don't really explain why Equalism is a meaningful change from Feminism or they're extremely anti-feminist and make rambling accusations of cultural Marxism or homogeneity of violence, etc. This is my first ever edit to a wiki, let me know if the tone is inappropriate or something. MVHVTMV (talk) 14:08, 28 November 2016 (UTC)
I have removed the section completely though I still believe anti feminist egalitarianism is relevant and should probably have a mention. The section still just felt out of place and rather biased as a whole so I removed it for now. My suggestion for adding an anti feminist egalitarian section would be to find examples of these people who are prominent or who have actively created some kind of platform for this. My problem in finding such a platform or example is that there does not appear to be anything outside of the internet about Anti Feminist Egalitarians. I am biased in this as I am more on the feminist leaning side, but I do think it is possible to write in a less biased way.Repeatingbeingfunctional (talk) 02:26, 28 December 2016
Is 'gender egalitarianism' specific type of egalitarianism?
Is it correct to list 'gender egalitarianism' as a specific type of egalitarianism? Following excerpts from scholarly articles shows that the term is not used to refer to specific branch of egalitarianism:
- "High gender egalitarianism societies have characteristics such as..."[1]
- "...use of active sexuality as a strategy for gaining gender egalitarianism"[2]
- "By strong gender egalitarianism we mean a structure of social relations in which the division of labor around housework and caregiving within the family and occupational distributions within the public sphere are unaffected by gender"[3]
The suffix '-ism' doesn't always used to form a system of theory or practice, religious, ecclesiastical, philosophical, political, social, etc.
One site claims that 'gender egalitarianism' is a type of egalitarianism, and also suggests "Zygarchy" as a synonym, but the FAQ of the site says the author has no official training in philosophy. I also found that there was a Wikipedia article named 'Zygarchy' but the article has been deleted since there were no reliable sources.
Please also note that neither SEP nor IEP mentions 'gender egalitarianism' at all.
--SuyookTang (talk) 23:13, 29 January 2017 (UTC)
References
Equality of Men
The entire section is misleading. Prior to the late 1960s the term "man/men" was taken as synonymous with "human" (philosophically, equivalent to Greek "anthropos"). It is only a hyper-correctism where "man" is taken restrictively for "males". Many instances still exist in the English language--"mankind" still means both males and females, "God created 'man'" ("anthropos"), "one small step for a man (here a 'male'), one giant leap for "mankind" (all people). Distinctions in the social rights of "man" (e.g., by age, birth order, physical/mental abilities, property ownership, etc.) does not imply that "man" was not taken as generic for all people. Of course, those who were (are) against any distinguishing social construct, e.g., segregation by sex, would argue that separate treatment is inherently unequal (cf. Earl Warren, "Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal"; although segregated athletic programs, prisons, etc., are still not). The contention here is that by "man" only "males", even for those born after the contemporary shift in the usage, is an historical inanity at best or manipulatively feigning ignorance at worst, that does not stand up to a reading of literature from prior to the mid-20th century. Tachypaidia (talk) 06:31, 21 March 2017 (UTC)
A Commons file used on this page has been nominated for deletion
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Why does "Modern egalitarianism theory" have its own second level subheading?
It sounds like a very niche idea outside the mainstream of contemporary political philosophy. It has one citation. That citation is to an article in a not especially prestigious journal run by a political think tank. The article has, according to Google scholar, been cited twice. A search for the exact phrase "Modern egalitarianism theory" in Google scholar gives zero results. Simply put, whatever its objective merits or lack thereof in the current debate it lacks scholarly significance. This seems to me like someone's hobby horse rather than content worthy of a subheading at the same level of importance as "legal egalitarianism" or "social egalitarianism".
It certainly doesn't deserve a full paragraph under a second level subheading, and frankly unless it can be better sourced it should be deleted. This is a very important article that has to condense a lot of information about some of the most important debates in political theory and philosophy, it isn't a home for any old paper, however obscure. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 116.240.42.163 (talk) 11:35, 19 October 2019 (UTC)
NPOV: Islam and cherry picking of source
A quick look at what JSTOR shows of the source is enough. Following that statement it saysL "equal children of Adam, and the only distinction recognized in the sight of God is to be based on piety and good acts. With the establishment of the Arab-Mus-lim Empire, however, this egalitarian notion, as well as other ideals, such as social justice and social service, that is, alleviating suffering and helping the needy, which constituted an integral part of the Islamic teaching, slowly receded into the background. The explanation given for this change generally reiterates the fact that the main concern of the ruling authorities became the consolidation of their own power and (he administration of the state rather than upholding and implementing those Islamic ideals nurtured by the Qur'an and the Prophet. The book under review relates the fascinating story as of how the original egalitarian impulse of early Islam was not only diluted but was also tamed to conform to the prevailing hierarchical social ideas of older cultures in the conquered territories." Doug Weller talk 08:05, 25 January 2019 (UTC)
- For Islam section, I don't find any mention of the Quran's quote in the provided book.[2] If the quote was not mentioned then the section is WP:OR. There are more problems with other sections like the one from Sikhism ("Handbook of Research on Development and Religion" makes no mention of 'Egalitarianism' and "International Sikh Conference" (with no page numbers) is an unreliable source), Judaism (unsourced opinion section), Christianity (the only source is a book but without a page number and the book is not supporting the text). As such, I believe we must get rid of this entire section until a good meaningful section without WP:OR can be written. 2402:3A80:1535:47E2:D98A:641B:14CA:F5E9 (talk) 01:23, 26 November 2019 (UTC)
- I'm dubious about your research skills. The verse is 49:13[3] and is explicitly mentioned on p.24, there's no original research. I"ve replaced that section with a link to the verse. Doug Weller talk 13:39, 30 December 2019 (UTC)
This whole entry is confusing and rambling
For such an important and major topic this entry is all over the place. The main areas of thought, 'social' and 'legal' egalitarianism, are listed, but their content is a mess. For some reason 'Legal Egalitarianism' seems to be more a discussion of the use and meaning of nouns in egalitarian statements, and attempts to imply that gender equality was implicit in such statements which is incorrect for many of the examples given, ie Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen absolutely did not cover women (nor did it cover the poor or many other individuals). Then there is a tiny bit on feminism which just seems shoehorned in.
Legal Egalitarianism should focus on Equality before the Law, and Equality of Sovereign or Citizen Rights. It should at minimum reference The Social Contract Jean-Jacques ROUSSEAU and Two Treatises of Government LOCKE. It certainly should include a section on Race and Gender in reguards to Legal Egalitarianism.
Social Egalitarianism should cover concepts such as Equality of Race, Gender, Religion, Age in Opportunities or Outcomes, Elimination of Class, Equality in Economic prospects and Wealth. Much has been written about egalitarianism and these subjects but very little is discussed on the page.
Philosophical positions such as Rousseaus "in respect of riches, no citizen shall ever be wealthy enough to buy another, and none poor enough to be forced to sell himself:1 which implies, on the part of the great, moderation in goods and position, and, on the side of the common sort, moderation in avarice and covetousness." or Lockes "It is evident that all human beings—as creatures belonging to the same species and rank and born indiscriminately with all the same natural advantages and faculties—are equal amongst themselves." should be discussed.
Major social movements could be listed such as Civil Rights Movement, BLM, The Occupy movement, and of course Feminism.
The section 'Religious and spiritual egalitarianism' really should be titled 'Egalitarianism in Religion' and included in a section on Egalitarian Philosophy.
'Egalitarianism and non-human animals'. I have no issue with including such edge case philosophical discussions if there was actually an indepth section on egalitarian philosophy
The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy section on Egalitarianism provides a decent overview and the wiki should cover at least its core points (if not as indepth) https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/egalitarianism/
Oemurray (talk) 16:23, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
I agree with most of this. Additionally, the only reference to the likely origin of the word, the french revolution motto, is under a section where it holds no relevance.--TZubiri (talk) 16:32, 8 June 2020 (UTC)
Degarble This!
I'm trying to make sense of the following:
"A very early example of equality is what might be described as outcome economic egalitarianism is the Chinese philosophy of agriculturalism which held that the economic policies of a country need to be based upon egalitarian self-sufficiency."
This mangled sentence began as a reference to Xu Xing in 2011. I think what is trying to be said is something like: "an early example of equality-of-outcome economic egalitarianism is ..." - but I'm really not sure. I don't see the link between equality of outcome and egalitarian self-sufficiency. Could somebody more familiar with the subject than I am figure this one out?
Thanks, Jean-de-Nivelle (talk) 19:33, 25 September 2022 (UTC)
Rewrite needed
This article has become a political minefield, rather than an encyclopedia entry. The content is downright wrong, biased, and ignores American Standard English, such as parts of speech. I think a complete rewrite may be justified, even a title change to Egalitarian. My proposal.
Egalitarian is generally a noun or adjective describing someone (or something) that supports equal rights among people. In terms of philosophy, there are several distinguishable variants, but egalitarian can describe any of them. Understanding the nuances of these philosophies requires an understanding of the differences between rights and privileges.
Liberal egalitarianism is an account of the justice of political, social, and economic institutions. It is about the simultaneous strong defense of individual liberty and substantive equality. However, because there are real tensions and sometimes contradictions between certain liberties and substantive equalities, liberal egalitarianism is also necessarily a set of theories about how to address these. https://www.berghahnjournals.com/abstract/journals/theoria/61/140/th6114003.xml
Progressive egalitarianism is a political ideology that advocates for the identical distribution of wealth and power among all people.
Elitist egalitarianism that refers to the belief that some people are more deserving of certain privileges than others, while still maintaining the idea of equality. [4] Elitism implies that different aspects of socio-political reality should be assessed through their objective value, whereas egalitarianism suggests that the objective properties of such value cannot be measured in principle, because it would lead to “inequality.”
Progressive egalitarianism confuses the concept of “equality” with the concept of “fairness”. Equality and fairness are two related but different concepts. Equality means treating everyone exactly the same, regardless of their needs or differences12. Fairness means treating people according to their needs, which may not always be equal12. Elitism disagrees with such an assumption. It suggests that whatever is natural is necessarily fair.
Recent supreme court decisions against affirmative action are strictly egalitarian, but do not satisfy many who profess to support a progressive interpretation. This may be a controversial observation, but it fits with the Funk & Wagnels definition of the words. The United States constitution, particularly the 14th amendment subscribes to a related but more precise concept, that of equal protection under the law. The constitution could be described closer to Liberal egalitarianism than progressive egalitarianism.