Philosopher Prince
[url][/url]
The heir to one of the world’s oldest monarchies, a traditionalist? You don’t say. But Charles’s traditionalism is far from the stuffy, bland, institutional conservatism typical of a man of his rank. Charles, in fact, is a philosophical traditionalist, which is a rather more radical position to hold.
He is an anti-modernist to the marrow, which doesn’t always put him onside with the Conservative Party. Charles’s support for organic agriculture and other green causes, his sympathetic view of Islam, and his disdain for liberal economic thinking have earned him skepticism from some on the British right. (“Is Prince Charles ill-advised, or merely idiotic?” the Tory libertarian writer James Delingpole once asked in print.) And some Tories fear that the prince’s unusually forceful advocacy endangers the most traditional British institution of all: the monarchy itself.
Others, though, see in Charles a visionary of the cultural right, one whose worldview is far broader, historically and otherwise, than those of his contemporaries on either side of the political spectrum. In this reading, Charles’s thinking is not determined by post-Enlightenment categories but rather draws on older ways of seeing and understanding that conservatives ought to recover. “All in all, the criticisms of Prince Charles from self-styled ‘Tories’ show just how little they understand about the philosophy they claim to represent,” says the conservative philosopher Roger Scruton.
Scruton’s observation highlights a fault line bisecting latter-day Anglo-American conservatism: the philosophical split between traditionalists and libertarians. In this way, what you think of the Prince of Wales reveals whether you think conservatism, to paraphrase the historian George H. Nash, is essentially about the rights of individuals to be what they want to be or the duties of individuals to be what they ought to be.
(...)
It has, of course, been fashionable to belittle the Prince of Wales almost from the time he put away short trousers. And I suspect that very few readers of pieces list this one will give much thought to the considerable merits that he brings to public life.
The Prince of Wales has been talking about sustainable development for a quarter century--long before that term entered our public policy debates. He introduced bottle recycling in the Royal Household over 30 years ago, and we are still trying to keep them out of landfills today. He has demonstrated that sustainable, organic farming can produce profits. He has successfully powered 1,200 homes using methane from decomposing farm material. His charitable activities provide over £100 million going into charties that include diverse interests such as business mentorships for youth at risk.
The Prince of Wales has had a unique opportunity to be both an enormously privileged public figure, and at the same time to define his own public role. Can any other children of enormously wealthy or powerful parents claim to achieved as much?
_________________
--James