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The personal responsibility of authoritarians, will in all likelihood be ceded to the higher authority, and they will not take personal responsibility for their actions, but feel themselves to act as representatives for models of expectation as objectives of higher authority.
In terms of progressive authoritarianism, for the purposes of promoting progressive advancement, the individual is subject to models of expectation which represent states and conditions as progressive elevation. The mandates
of Authoritarianism are definitive, singular, conclusive, explicit, precise and specific, wherein the individual is expected to correspond to models and standards for the ways one is to think, speak and act. Since these models are considered to be elite, this confers upon those who practice them, advantaged status, privileges and responsibilities that may be thought to not apply or be obtainable by others unlike themselves.
Models of expectation are Conceptual Authority which dictate to the individual activity, behavior, thought and speech. The philosophy of
Progressive Materialism, specifically
in terms of the
Mundane Consciousness, is said here to have an orientation and propensity for authoritarianism defined by the term
Authoritative Dictates. This means that
the demand for the individual to conform and correspond to progressive and superior models of expectation as objectives, is authoritarian in that outside higher authority other than the self-deciding individual is the directive for one's living decisions. Progression is change away from an original condition, and the objective is to promote progressed states as an objective, as opposed to
a natural state which essentially takes care of itself within the context of, left alone things do what is natural. With progressive models of expectation as objectives, original conditions are considered invalid and not legitimate in
and of themselves. Original conditions must conform to an authority outside themselves for the legitimacy of their existence.
Authoritarianism (7 of 9)
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