John Hibbing and his colleagues are pioneering research on the physiological underpinnings of political ideology.
By Chris Mooney
Mother Jones | Fri Apr. 4, 2014
Thomas Jefferson was a smart dude. And in one of his letters to John Adams, dated June 27, 1813,
Jefferson made an observation about the nature of politics that science
is only now, two centuries later, beginning to confirm. "The same
political parties which now agitate the United States, have existed
through all time," wrote Jefferson. "The terms of Whig and Tory belong
to natural, as well as to civil history," he later added. "They denote
the temper and constitution of mind of different individuals."
Tories were the British conservatives of Jefferson's day, and Whigs were the British liberals.
What Jefferson was saying, then, was that whether you call yourself a
Whig or a Tory has as much to do with your psychology or disposition as
it has to do with your ideas. At the same time, Jefferson was also
suggesting that there's something pretty fundamental and basic about
Whigs (liberals) and Tories (conservatives), such that the two basic
political factions seem to appear again and again in the world, and have
for "all time."
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