FWIW, my take on Scruton's conservatism: 1. Yeah, Edmund Burke is pretty much right about the dangers of top down change motivated by a political philosophy derived from first principles. (I've thought that for years.)
But he can't really think if the school curricula changes, etc, then youngsters are suddenly going to be less interested in their Snapchat, X-Boxes and Beyonce? The social forces in play are too powerful, surely. It would actually take a radical reworking of the social order...
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I guess Scruton is trying through his writing etc. to contribute to a change of culture. And cultures do change - witness the success of feminism.
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Yes, he clearly hopes for a cultural change, but I'm not sure there's any instance where a culture has turned away from superabundance to embrace a return to the spiritual. At least, not in the face of a rampant democratising populism. It's a forlorn hope, Piers. We're lost!

End of conversation
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