Most of the time we imagine we are unique individuals – very occasionally
we have a sense that we are but a grain of sand in an endless desert.
I have, these past 2 days, been absorbed by a book whose title The Dawn of Euroasia – on the trail of the new world order (2018) intrigued me sufficiently to persuade me to fork out 10 euros without too rigorously subjecting its content to the tests I recommend for non-fiction books. Its author Bruno Macaes was unknown to me but seems to be one of the slippery new breed of geographical, linguistic and functional commuters.
An archetypal figure in these most modern of modern times is the character
who flits between continents, universities, policy institutes, government and
business consultancies and on whom it is difficult to pin any label except that
of “technocrat”.
I have, these past 2 days, been absorbed by a book whose title The Dawn of Euroasia – on the trail of the new world order (2018) intrigued me sufficiently to persuade me to fork out 10 euros without too rigorously subjecting its content to the tests I recommend for non-fiction books. Its author Bruno Macaes was unknown to me but seems to be one of the slippery new breed of geographical, linguistic and functional commuters.
A self-styled “adventurer”, Maçães was a Professor 2006/07 at the University of Yonsei in the Republic of Korea, where he taught International Political Economy; then worked at the American Enterprise Institute in 2008. From 2008 to 2011, Maçães helped launch a new international university in Europe, the European College of Liberal Arts in Berlin.
Between 2011-2013 he was a policy adviser in the Portuguese PM office whose political connections allowed him, for a couple of years, to be Secretary of State for European Affairs which he left in late 2015. He has held positions at the Carnegie and right-wing Hudson Institutes; and is currently a hedge-fund adviser with Flint Global
I could see that the text covered aspects of China and the Central Asian
countries in which I had spent almost a decade of my life - and that
acknowledgements were duly made to the geopolitics writer par excellence Robert Kaplan –
although there was no reading list.
I am now on the final chapter and have to say that this is an extremely
well-read 45 year old (with the breadth including a range of Russian novels he’s
able to build seamlessly into the text)- even if this
interview does reveal a certain slickness
Particularly resonant at this time was a section covering the 2015
immigration crisis which was resolved by a formula based on algorithms which
weighed for population size, GNP (40% apiece), average number of asylum
applicants per million inhabitants in 2010-2014; and the unemployment rate (10%
apiece). As he was reading the account of the relevant meeting in his office,
he suddenly had the realization that
“the EU isn’t meant to take political decisions. What it tries to do is develop a system of rules to be applied more or less autonomously to a highly complex political and social reality” (p228)
I am surprised, however, that Macaes does not make more of the cultural
insights which occur particularly in his “Chinese Dreams” chapter (pages 137-147). His spell in South Korea will have allowed him to become familiar with
the literature on the culture
of geography - whose principal exponents are de Hofstede, Trompenaars and Inglehart
Richard Lewis’s When
Cultures Clash (1996) is my favourite go-to reference whenever the
discussion turns to questions of cultural difference – as is Richard Nisbett’s Geography of
Thought (2003) who argues that-
East Asians and Westerners perceive the world and think about it in very different ways. Westerners are inclined to attend to some focal object, analyzing its attributes and categorizing it in an effort to find out what rules govern its behavior. Rules used include formal logic. Causal attributions tend to focus exclusively on the object and are therefore often mistaken.
East Asians are more likely to attend to a broad perceptual and conceptual field, noticing relationships and changes and grouping objects based on family resemblance rather than category membership. Causal attributions emphasize the context. Social factors are likely to be important in directing attention. East Asians live in complex social networks with prescribed role relations. Attention to context is important to effective functioning.
More independent Westerners live in less constraining social worlds and have the luxury of attending to the object and their goals with respect to it. The physical ‘‘affordances’’ of the environment may also influence perception.
Most of the writing on the geography of thought hesitates at this stage
and seems unwilling to explore the implications of such a startling discovery. The
niceties of cultural behaviour on display at global interactions are a safer
topic – forming an integral part of most Business School courses.
But the reviews
of The Geography of Thought clearly suggest that all of us need to be thinking
much more about the way we all take decisions – whether as individuals,
organisations or countries – in full recognition that there are, legitimately, various
styles appropriate to particular contexts….…
Further Reading
This is a more eclectic list than usual not just because Macaes is
well-read but also for the thoughts his text gives rise to….
Beyond Liberal Democracy –
political thinking in an east Asian context; Daniel Bell (2006)
is a powerful early apologia for the system of party control in China written
by a Canadian political scientist who has chosen since 2000 or so to live in
China
The Art of Thinking; Allen Harrison and
Robert Bramson (1984) The book which introduced me to the idea that there are,
legitimately, different styles of thinking
Decisive – how to make
better choices in life and work; C and D Heath (2013). An example of
the huge literature now available on decision-making…
Cultures
and organization – software of the mind; G de Hofstede (1991) One of the
first to explore the cultural aspects of organisations and societies
When Cultures Collide – Richard Lewis (1996)
– the full text of the easiest book on the subject
Riding
the Waves of Culture; Frans Trompenaars (1996). Another Dutchman rides the
waves…
The geography of thought; Richard Nesbitt
(2003) – which pushed the ideas further
The Spirit of Russia; Thomas Masyrk (1913 German; 1919 English). An amazing book written before the First World War by the guy who subsequently became President of Czechoslovakia
The Spirit of Russia; Thomas Masyrk (1913 German; 1919 English). An amazing book written before the First World War by the guy who subsequently became President of Czechoslovakia