The Rise and Fall of Ideologies in Fukuyama´s The End of History

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In his essay, The End of History, Fukuyama discusses the rise and fall of various ideologies throughout history, and the prevalence of western liberal democracy as the final form of human government.
Fukuyama suggests that history can be summarized by different ideologies. He points out the Karl Marx also sought out the ‘end of history’ when he proposed communism as the final and perfect form of government. Marx, according to Fukuyama, borrowed this idea of a beginning middle and end of history from Hegel. Fukuyama takes it one step further and looks at Kojeve’s interpretation of Hegel’s theories to gain a better understanding of ideology’s roll in history. According to Kojeve, Hegel believed that ideology is made up of not just political beliefs and policies, but religious, cultural and moral values as well. Throughout history, man’s quest has been a subconscious search for all of his needs to be satisfied and conflicts resolved. All of human’s behaviors in the material world are therefore a result of their consciousness. In Weber’s The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, the economic theory that suggested that man is a rational profit-maximize is disproven. It was believed that high wages meant increased labor productivity, but in reality, a peasant would value leisure more than income, and therefore work less for the same amount. The choice of leisure demonstrates that man’s behaviors are not entirely determined by material forces, but are predominately determined by the forces of consciousness, which Fukuyama more broadly labels as ‘ideology.’ Having established ideology as the impetus of history, Fukuyama describes the evolutionary progression of history as the push for a perfect ideology. In his eyes, history will...

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...trend of democracy continues and my predictions of the Middle East and China are correct. What happens then? This is what Fukuyama meant by the ‘end of history.’ No longer is the world pitting different ideologies against one another. Fukuyama predicts that at this point there will only be small conflicts over technological and economical issues. However, this is where I agree with Fukuyama’s critics. The technological and economical issues will not be the only issues the world faces. National and cultural ideologies will arise even in the face of liberal democracies worldwide. As Himmelfarb points out, the holocaust was an entirely unprovoked event. With that being said, the future will always have new unprovoked events and ideas occurring. Some may be so influential, that they will impact certain countries and perhaps introduce new and better (or worse) ideologies.

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