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Mission
Statement
The Emerson Institute for Freedom and Culture is working to change
the culture by promoting progressive natural classicism in the arts
and humanities.
Censors of every ideology know the power of the arts and humanities.
Culture emerges from the people, who are influenced by the culture.
Politicians follow the people; the laws they pass are shaped by
their perception of what the people want. Thus, if any long-term
support for free markets and personal liberty is to occur, the
changes must be made in the culture rather than with the
politicians. If we have a culture which promotes freedom, truth,
beauty, meaning, value, and virtue, we will have people who will
support freedom, truth, beauty, meaning, value, and virtue in their
lives as a whole, including in their politics. The top will be
changed by changes at the bottom.
Cultures, economies, and free societies are all complex systems.
Complex systems have bottom-up self-organization, evolve, are
polycentric hierarchies, and involve nonlinear feedback loops. Such
systems are generative of growth, freedom, value, meaning, and
virtue. Thus, we seek to help create this kind of natural culture,
one that is a complex, nonlinear, self-organizing, flexible
hierarchy that will allow for greater freedom and creative
innovation, limit power, and reduce coercion in favor of mutually
beneficial exchange and assent. We also seek to oppose all attempts
to create a simple, linear, coercive, rigid, egalitarian culture
that makes people weak, passive, irresponsible, lacking in
self-control, easily led, incapable of independent thought,
nihilistic, and prone to engage in crime and self-destructive
behavior – all of which makes a society conducive to the acceptance
of totalitarianism.
Any real and lasting societal change must start in the culture – in
the arts and humanities. If the people are to believe in freedom,
truth, beauty, meaning, value, and virtue, then our arts and
humanities must create or reconstruct freedom, truth, beauty,
meaning, value and virtue in works which address themselves to the
average person and not just to the specialist. In other words, we
must support works that provide a counterpoint to those postmodern
works which promote a simplistic, irrational, unbeautiful,
nihilistic worldview that undermines rather than reinforces the
creative freedom inherent in the world. Through journals and
newsletters, articles and books, scholarly panels, media
appearances, and special projects, EIFC strives to reflect the
reality of the world as a self-organizing, nonlinear, creative,
hierarchical, complex, emergentist system conducive to freedom. |
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