Many people think that the differences between the left and right political spectrum have to do with the issues and policies they feel strongly about and the solutions they offer for those issues . But, as many have realized, classifying people by the causes they find important and the solutions they propose, often leads to 'strange bedfellows" and a somewhat convoluted classification system. Still, it can't be argued that the designation of "left" and "right" do seem to have some affinity with certain political stances. What accounts for this though, in my opinion, is not the stances taken, but the more general philosophical opinion held by each side which lead to those policy stances. This little essay will lay out some philosophical differences underlying the left and right and attempt to clarify the muddy waters of political classification.
At the center of the left/right political divide, I would argue, is a basic distinction or attitude about nature itself. The left is much influenced by Romantic Idealism in it's basic assumption about the value and purity of nature. The division between man and nature is artificial in the left leaning ideologies and man's place is within nature as a part of it. And since to the left nature is "pristine," it follows that anything "unauthentic" is to be avoided. Nature is untainted by artificiality and if left alone free to be fully self-balancing from that reasonably stable over time. This reliance upon the Romantic Ideal leads to a fundamental political stance which emphasizes the intrinsic value and equality of the individual acting in nature. The goals are a harmonious whole where each part is assumed to have been supplied by nature to fulfill a particular niche in the overall enterprise, a niche where that particular part will experience fulfillment and even enlightenment. Writers influencing this view through their works include Jean-Jaques Rousseu ("Discourse on Political Economy", "The Social Contract or Principles of Political Rights"), Herman Hesse ("Siddhartha"), Karl Marx ("The Communist Manifesto" -- with Frederick Engles, Michael Foucault ("Discipline and Punish"), and many, many others. In this system humans are actors on the stage with many other actors all attempting to coordinate things so that each receives what is needed to survive in a balanced and harmonious manner.
In contrast the right views nature as separate from man. Nature is neither good nor bad, but neutral. Nothing in nature is pristine but all of nature is in flux and it is the job of the human species -- end-result of the progression of nature -- to re-order nature to the benefit of the human species. In this system of thought whatever merit the indivudual has is subject to what he or she makes of himself or herself and the rewards for that effort are in accordance to the degree his or her effort reinforces the status quo. It may be that an individual can imput value to another, but no individual has value intrinsically. In this system of thought humans are the agents of change -- as guided by those superior. Authors who are important to the right are: Frederick Nietzsche ("Thus Spake Zarathrustra", "Philosophy in the Tragic Age of the Greeks". "Twiligh of the Idols"), Charles Darwin ("On the Origins of Species"), Ayn Rand ("The Fountainhead," "Atlas Shrugged"), Herbert Spencer ("The Study of Sociology","The Principles of Ethics"), BF Skinner ("Beyond Freedom and Dignity"), and others, of course. What might be added here are the theist who also inhabit many of the right of center groups. Their belief system generally follows the strictures of the right but adds to their concepts, in contrast to the evolutionary-materialist view, the focus on creationist-dualism (the idea that the material world is not the only realm of existence). Authors that might be included in the list of what supports the right are often at odds with the other favorites of the right, but the distinction is only skin deep. A theist who believes that man was put on earth to dominate and control nature, that nature is morally neutral, and that humans do not have intrinsic value only differs from the other side of the right in believing that value can be imputed as well as earned. The end results are about the same in both cases, which, of course, while making the authors influencing each branch somewhat divergent, also creates a lot of overlap.
AJ