Part 1: An Old Question Asked Anew: Francis Fukuyama
Part 1: An Old Question Asked Anew: Francis Fukuyama
Part 1: An Old Question Asked Anew: Francis Fukuyama
Francis Fukuyama opens his book by discussing the then-recent events that prompted his
thesis. He begins by discussing the pessimism about historical progress he detects in his
contemporaries. The reason for this is the destructive events of the 20th century, including
two world wars and the rise of many authoritarian and totalitarian regimes. These events
helped to destroy certainties about progress that were common in the 19th century and
have caused some in the West to question the validity and effectiveness of democracy
itself. But Fukuyama wishes to make an opposite case: events in the 1980s and 1990s
offer reason for renewed optimism. He argues the apparent strength of authoritarian states
was always a fiction. Pessimists had mistaken a temporary blip on the road to progress for
a real threat to liberal democracy. He examines first the authoritarian states of the right,
and then the "totalitarian" states of the communist left. Both kinds experienced a series of
crises in the 1970s and 1980s from which few recovered. In both analyses Fukuyama
points to two crises that these kinds of states could not resolve: their inability to manage
rapid economic change and the inevitable crisis of legitimacy. Fukuyama argues his age is
undergoing a global liberal revolution which is ushering in the final stage in a "Universal
History": the worldwide triumph of liberal democracy and capitalism (the economic system
in which the means of production are privately owned and distributed through markets).
Having outlined his historical argument, Fukuyama begins to explain what it means to live
in the "end of History" and what problems the future holds. One of these is the incomplete
application of liberal democracy across the world. He identifies two main opponents of
liberal democracy: religion and nationalism. Fukuyama believes it is only in the creation of
civic and democratic cultures that democracy can truly take root. A strong "democratic
tradition" is not necessary, but statesmen and people alike must be willing to practice
democracy and see it flourish. Fukuyama then examines the "work ethic" that is derived
(like democracy) from thymos rather than pure economic motives. This work ethic differs
from culture to culture, and Fukuyama uses this to explain why, although they may adopt
democracy, economic and social differences among nations will persist. Authoritarianism is
another aspect of culture Fukuyama ponders. He sets the roots of authoritarianism in
"group cultures" as found in Southeast Asia. It is these cultural factors that, for Fukuyama,
create the persistence of authoritarian politics in places like Singapore.
Having established to his satisfaction that competition at the end of history will be between
cultures, he then points to what a foreign policy of the period will look like. He attacks the
foreign policy "realism" of the Cold War as treating contemporary facts about nations and
the balance of power as set facts that have to be accommodated. Fukuyama stresses that
these "facts" were contingent on a set of historical circumstances that are now changed by
the overthrow of communism. Realism is thus unrealistic as a basis for a new foreign
policy. Fukuyama posits a growing distinction between the "historical" world in which
nations, nationalism, and imperialism persist, and the "post-historical" world where cultures
are drawn together through ties of international trade and cooperation.