Open society () is a term coined by French-Jewish philosopher Henri Bergson in 1932,• Henri Bergson (1932 1937). Les Deux Sources de la morale et de la religion, and . Félix Alcan.
• Translated as (1935 1977), The Two Sources of Morality and Religion Internet Archive (left or right arrow buttons select succeeding pages), pp. 18–27, 45–65, 229–234., trs., R. A. Audra and C. Brereton, with assistance of W. H. Carter. Macmillan press, Notre Dame.Leszek Kołakowski, Modernity on Endless Trial (1997), p. 162 and describes a dynamic system inclined to moral universalism.Thomas Mautner (2005), 2nd ed. The Penguin Dictionary of Philosophy "Open, p. 443. Bergson contrasted an open society with what he called a closed society, a closed system of law, morality or religion. Bergson suggests that if all traces of civilization were to disappear, the instincts of the closed society for including or excluding others would remain.Henri Bergson, The Two Sources of Morality and Religion, Macmillan, 1935, pp. 20–21.
The idea of an open society was further developed during World War II by the Austrian-born Jewish philosopher Karl Popper.K. R. Popper, The Open Society and Its Enemies, 2 vols. (1945 1966), 5th ed.A. N. Wilson, Our Times (2008), pp. 17–18 Popper saw it as part of a historical continuum reaching from the Organicism, tribal, or Authoritarianism, through the open society (marked by a critical attitude to tradition) to the abstract or depersonalized society lacking all face-to-face interaction transactions.K. R. Popper, The Open Society and Its Enemies, Volume One (1945), 1 and 174–175.
Whereas tribalistic and collectivist societies do not distinguish between and social customs, so that individuals are unlikely to challenge traditions they believe to have a sacred or magical basis, the beginnings of an open society are marked by a distinction between natural and man-made law, and an increase in personal responsibility and accountability for moral choices (not incompatible with religious belief).Popper, K., The Open Society and Its Enemies, Volume One (Routledge, 1945, reprint 2006), chapter 5, part III.
Popper argued that the ideas of individuality, criticism, and humanitarianism cannot be suppressed once people have become aware of them, and therefore that it is impossible to return to the closed society,Popper, K., The Open Society and Its Enemies, Volume One (Routledge, 1945, reprint 2006), chapter 10, part VIII. but at the same time recognized the continuing emotional pull of what he called "the lost group spirit of tribalism", as manifested for example in the of the 20th century.K. R. Popper, 1945:199–200
While the period since Popper's study has undoubtedly been marked by the spread of the open society, this may be attributed less to Popper's advocacy and more to the role of the economic advances of late modernity.Wilson, p. 403 Growth-based industrial societies require literacy, anonymity and social mobility from their membersErnest Gellner, Nationalism (1997), pp. 25–29 — elements incompatible with much tradition-based behavior but demanding the ever-wider spread of the abstract social relations Georg Simmel saw as characterizing the metropolitan mental stance.M. Hardt/K. Weeks, The Jameson Reader (2000), pp. 260–266
He considered that only democracy provides an institutional mechanism for reform and leadership change without the need for bloodshed, revolution or coup d'état.K. R. Popper, 1945:4
Popper's theory that knowledge is provisional and fallible implies that society must be open to alternative points of view. An open society is associated with cultural and religious pluralism; it is always open to improvement because knowledge is never completed but always ongoing: "if we wish to remain human, then there is only one way, the way into the open society ... into the unknown, the uncertain and insecure".K. R. Popper, 1945:201
In the closed society, claims to certain knowledge and ultimate truth lead to the attempted imposition of one version of reality. Such a society is closed to freedom of thought. In contrast, in an open society each citizen needs to engage in critical thinking, which requires freedom of thought and expression and the cultural and legal institutions that can facilitate this.
Arguably however it was the tension between a traditional society and the new, more open space of the emerging polis which most fully marked classical Athens,J. Boardman et al., The Oxford History of the Classical World (1991), p. 232 and Popper was very aware of the continuing emotional appeal of what he called "holism...longing for the lost unity of tribal life"K. R. Popper, 1945:80 into the modern world.
Popper however, did not identify the open society either with democracy or with capitalism or a laissez-faire economy, but rather with a critical frame of mind on the part of the individual, in the face of communal group think of whatever kind.I. C. Jarvie et al. eds., Popper's Open Society after fifty years (1999), pp. 43–46 An important aspect in Popper's thinking is the notion that the truth can be lost. Critical attitude does not mean that the truth is found.
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