Roger Scruton
Sir Roger Vernon Scruton (27 February 1944 – 12 January 2020) was a British philosopher, author, and conservative intellectual renowned for his extensive writings on aesthetics, politics, culture, and the defense of Western civilization.[1][2] Educated at Jesus College, Cambridge, where he earned degrees in philosophy, Scruton lectured at Birkbeck College, University of London, becoming Reader in Philosophy in 1979 and Professor of Aesthetics in 1985, before serving as Professor of Philosophy at Boston University from 1992. He authored over fifty books, including influential works on conservatism such as The Meaning of Conservatism (1980) and How to Be a Conservative (2014), as well as treatises on beauty, music, and sexual desire that emphasized the role of tradition and the sacred in human flourishing.[3][4][5][6] During the Cold War, Scruton played a significant role in the anti-communist underground in Eastern Europe, smuggling forbidden texts, organizing samizdat publications, and teaching dissident intellectuals, efforts that earned him honors from the governments of Poland, Czechia, and Hungary.[7][3] Knighted in 2016 for services to philosophy, teaching, and public education, and elected Fellow of the British Academy and Royal Society of Literature, Scruton's commitment to first principles of human nature and cultural inheritance often positioned him against prevailing academic and media orthodoxies, leading to professional ostracism yet enduring influence among those prioritizing empirical realism over ideological conformity.[4][2]Early Life and Education
Family Background and Childhood
Roger Vernon Scruton was born on 27 February 1944 in the rural village of Buslingthorpe, Lincolnshire, England, to John "Jack" Scruton, a schoolteacher from Manchester, and Beryl Claris (née Haynes), who managed the household.[8][9][1] His father's career in education provided a modest stability, though rooted in northern working-class origins, while his mother maintained a domestic focus amid post-war austerity.[10][11] Scruton grew up with two sisters in High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, where the family relocated soon after his birth, living in a pebbledashed semi-detached house typical of interwar suburban development.[1][8] This environment shaped an early exposure to provincial English life, marked by his father's stern discipline and interest in local history, contrasted with his mother's gentler, literature-oriented habits such as reading romantic novels.[11] The household emphasized self-reliance and cultural appreciation, fostering Scruton's nascent intellectual curiosity amid a backdrop of rationing and reconstruction in the late 1940s and 1950s.[9]Formal Education and Influences
Scruton attended the Royal Grammar School in High Wycombe from 1954 to 1961, where he excelled in mathematics and sciences.[12] In 1962, he entered Jesus College, Cambridge, on an open scholarship to study Moral Sciences Tripos, the undergraduate philosophy course.[10] He graduated in 1965 with a Bachelor of Arts degree, achieving a double first-class honours.[13] Following a period away from academia, Scruton returned to Cambridge in 1967 to pursue doctoral research in aesthetics under the supervision of Michael Tanner.[14] He completed his PhD in philosophy in 1972, with a thesis focused on the philosophy of art and aesthetics, reflecting his growing interest in beauty and cultural critique.[15] This formal training in analytic philosophy, dominant in Cambridge's Moral Sciences, exposed him to logical positivism and Wittgensteinian thought, though he later critiqued these traditions for neglecting deeper human experiences.[16] Scruton's intellectual influences during and after his education included Immanuel Kant's emphasis on judgment and the sublime, G.W.F. Hegel's dialectical approach to history and spirit, and Edmund Burke's defense of tradition against revolutionary abstractions.[17] Literary critics like T.S. Eliot and F.R. Leavis shaped his views on culture and moral imagination, while Ludwig Wittgenstein's later philosophy prompted reflections on language and meaning that Scruton adapted to conservative ends.[17] These thinkers informed his rejection of modernist ideologies, fostering a philosophy rooted in the sacred and the particular over abstract rationalism.[18]Academic and Professional Career
Teaching at Birkbeck and Early Academia
Roger Scruton commenced his academic career with a research fellowship at Peterhouse, Cambridge, from 1969 to 1971, following his undergraduate studies at the same university.[13] In 1971, he was appointed lecturer in philosophy at Birkbeck College, University of London, an institution renowned for its evening classes designed for mature, working students, which exposed him to a broad range of non-traditional learners unbound by the typical ideological filters of full-time academia.[19] [3] At Birkbeck, Scruton's teaching emphasized aesthetics and the philosophy of art, fields in which he would establish his reputation through rigorous analysis grounded in traditional Western canons rather than prevailing modernist trends.[12] He advanced to reader in philosophy in 1979 and was elevated to professor of aesthetics in 1985, positions he held until resigning in 1992 to pursue independent scholarship amid growing estrangement from the philosophical establishment due to his defense of conservative principles.[3] [13] [12] This period at Birkbeck marked Scruton's early consolidation as a thinker prioritizing aesthetic judgment and cultural continuity over deconstructive critiques dominant in contemporary philosophy, though his heterodox views—forged partly in response to the 1968 student upheavals he witnessed in Paris—rendered him an outlier among peers, limiting broader institutional recognition despite his productivity.[20] [12] His tenure thus exemplified the tensions between individual intellectual integrity and the conformist pressures of mid-20th-century British academia, where empirical fidelity to tradition clashed with ideological progressivism.[21]Editorial Role with The Salisbury Review
In 1982, Roger Scruton became the founding editor of The Salisbury Review, a quarterly conservative journal established by the Salisbury Group to promote traditionalist thought amid the cultural and political shifts of the era.[22] The publication aimed to counter prevailing leftist ideologies in academia and media by emphasizing cultural continuity, national identity, and skepticism toward progressive reforms, often critiquing aspects of Thatcherism that Scruton viewed as insufficiently rooted in Burkean principles.[23] Scruton published the journal through his own Claridge Press, funding it personally and editing it without compensation for its initial 18 years.[24] Under Scruton's editorial direction, The Salisbury Review featured contributions from intellectuals advocating for the preservation of Western heritage against multiculturalism and secular modernism, including pieces that provoked public debate, such as Ray Honeyford's 1984 critique of inner-city educational policies prioritizing ethnic separatism over assimilation.[25] This stance amplified the journal's role as a platform for unapologetic conservatism, leading to its circulation in underground networks across Eastern Europe during the 1980s, where samizdat editions influenced dissidents resisting communist regimes.[22] Scruton's oversight ensured a focus on philosophical depth over populist appeal, with essays exploring themes like the sacredness of home, the value of high culture, and the perils of ideological utopianism, thereby sustaining the Review's reputation as a bulwark for principled right-wing discourse.[26] Scruton's tenure, spanning from 1982 to 2000, solidified the journal's niche influence despite limited mainstream distribution, as it prioritized intellectual rigor over broad accessibility and faced marginalization from establishment outlets biased toward liberal narratives.[22] His editorial decisions, including the rejection of fashionable relativism in favor of objective standards in art and politics, underscored a commitment to first-hand cultural defense, though they contributed to professional repercussions for Scruton, such as academic ostracism.[27] By 2000, Scruton stepped down, handing over to subsequent editors while the Review continued to embody the traditionalist ethos he had cultivated.[22]Later Academic Posts and Government Advising
Following his resignation from Birkbeck College in 1992 to pursue freelance writing and consultancy, Scruton held a series of visiting and part-time academic appointments, primarily in aesthetics and philosophy. From 1992 to 1995, he maintained positions at Boston University.[9] [28] In 2005, he served as Research Professor at the Institute of Psychological Sciences in Arlington, Virginia, followed by part-time roles there until 2009.[3] [9] He held a visiting professorship in the James Madison Program at Princeton University in 2006.[12] Scruton was appointed Visiting Professor of Philosophy at the University of Oxford in 2009, delivering graduate classes on aesthetics until at least 2011.[3] [10] In 2010, he took an unpaid research professorship at the University of Buckingham, where he later taught a philosophy MA by thesis program as a fellow of the Humanities Research Institute; this extended into a part-time role from 2011 to 2014.[10] [29] He also held visiting positions at Blackfriars Hall, Oxford, and the University of St Andrews around 2011.[28] These roles allowed Scruton to focus on specialized teaching while expanding his influence in conservative intellectual circles, often without full-time institutional commitments.[16] Scruton's government advising began in the 2010s, aligning with his longstanding advocacy for aesthetic standards in architecture and urban planning. During the UK coalition government (2010–2015), he served as an adviser on design matters.[30] In November 2018, Housing Secretary James Brokenshire appointed him unpaid chair of the Building Better, Building Beautiful Commission, an independent body tasked with recommending policies to elevate architectural quality and promote beauty in new developments.[31] [30] The commission's April 2020 report, co-chaired by Scruton until his death, urged incentives for traditional designs and critiques of modernist planning failures, reflecting his critique of utilitarian urbanism.[31] In April 2019, Scruton was dismissed from the role after a New Statesman interview selectively edited his comments on George Soros, Islam, and China, prompting accusations of antisemitism and racism from outlets including The Guardian; the unedited transcript revealed contextual qualifications absent in the published version.[32] [33] Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick apologized in July 2019, reinstating Scruton following an independent review that confirmed distortions in the reporting, with Jenrick stating the sacking was unjust.[31] [34] Scruton continued in the position until his death in January 2020, underscoring his influence on policy amid media controversies often amplified by left-leaning publications despite evidentiary lapses in criticism.[35][36]Anti-Communist Activism
Underground Efforts in Eastern Europe
In the late 1970s, Scruton co-founded the Jan Hus Educational Foundation (JHEF) in Oxford to provide intellectual support to dissidents in communist Czechoslovakia, organizing clandestine philosophy seminars in Prague for persecuted scholars excluded from official universities.[37] The foundation, named after the 15th-century Czech reformer Jan Hus, facilitated the translation and distribution of Western philosophical texts through samizdat networks, enabling underground study groups to conduct structured courses, print forbidden materials, and even administer exams in hidden locations like cellars, with results smuggled abroad for validation.[38] These efforts extended beyond Czechoslovakia; Scruton made regular visits to Poland starting in the 1980s, following the imposition of martial law in December 1981 that suppressed the Solidarity movement, where he contributed to sustaining anti-communist intellectual resistance by coordinating the delivery of books and ideas suppressed by the regime.[39] Operating under the codename "Wiewiórka" (Polish for "squirrel"), Scruton helped build an informal network across Eastern Europe, smuggling philosophical works and supporting dissidents who faced imprisonment or surveillance for engaging with banned thinkers like Kant, Hegel, and conservative critics of Marxism.[7] The JHEF's activities from 1980 to 1989 involved significant risks, including arrests and expulsions of participating Western academics; Scruton himself was detained by Czech authorities during visits and ultimately banned from the country, yet persisted in fostering these "underground universities" to preserve classical liberal and conservative thought against ideological conformity.[40] His direct involvement—traveling incognito, funding publications, and lecturing in secret—aimed to equip dissidents with tools for rational critique of totalitarianism, drawing on first-hand observation of communism's erosion of civil society and cultural heritage.[41] For these contributions, Scruton later received the First of June Prize from the Czech city of Plzeň in recognition of his role in sustaining intellectual freedom behind the Iron Curtain.[42]Smuggling and Dissident Support
In the late 1970s, Scruton initiated underground philosophy seminars in Prague, Czechoslovakia, in response to the 1977 Charter 77 dissident movement, providing intellectual resources to those suppressed under communist rule.[7] These efforts evolved into the co-founding of the Jan Hus Educational Foundation around 1979–1980, which operated an underground network smuggling forbidden Western books, printing equipment, and financial stipends to support dissident scholars and students across Eastern Europe.[39][7] The foundation's activities focused on Czechoslovakia but extended to Poland, Hungary, Romania, and Bulgaria, using methods such as tourist visas, concealed transports, and front organizations like puppet theaters to evade secret police surveillance.[7] Scruton personally participated in smuggling operations, including delivering censored philosophical texts and organizing secret seminars on topics like aesthetics, history, and music in locations such as Prague and Brno; by 1985, these had formalized into a Cambridge University-validated degree program, with student exams smuggled out via diplomatic bags for grading.[7] He also facilitated the extraction of dissident manuscripts for publication, such as anonymous articles and works by Václav Havel and Ján Čarnogurský, which appeared in The Salisbury Review under his editorial oversight.[12] Operating under the codename "Wiewórka" (Polish for "squirrel"), Scruton coordinated with Western academics and local dissidents, including figures like Jiří Müller and Kathy Wilkes, to sustain an informal "underground university" that educated thousands and preserved cultural resistance against ideological conformity.[9] These endeavors carried significant risks, including detention and interrogation by authorities—Scruton himself faced such incidents in Czechoslovakia—and the potential for arrest, as communist regimes viewed the influx of uncensored ideas as a direct threat to their control.[39] In Poland, following the 1981 martial law imposition, Scruton co-founded the Jagiellonian Trust to parallel these efforts, smuggling literature and hosting conferences amid heightened repression.[39][12] The foundation's work contributed to building civil society networks that outlasted the regimes, influencing the intellectual groundwork for the 1989 revolutions by prioritizing first-hand cultural and philosophical engagement over overt political agitation.[7]Key Intellectual Works and Themes
Aesthetics and the Philosophy of Beauty
Roger Scruton's contributions to aesthetics centered on defending the objective and redemptive character of beauty against modern relativism and utilitarianism. In works such as The Aesthetics of Architecture (1979) and Beauty: A Very Short Introduction (2009), he argued that beauty is not merely subjective preference but a recognition of harmony and fittingness in form, perceptible through disinterested contemplation akin to Kantian aesthetic judgment.[43][44] This fittingness manifests as an intentional directedness of the gaze or hearing toward an object, evoking a sense of consolation and transcendence that elevates human experience beyond mere utility or appetite.[44] Scruton categorized beauty into four domains: human beauty, which arouses desire through integrated physical and relational features; natural beauty, inviting contemplative repose in landscapes or phenomena without scientific reductionism; everyday beauty, found in functional objects like well-proportioned door frames that affirm practical order; and artistic beauty, demanding cultivated taste and meaning-making, where moral flaws such as sentimentality undermine aesthetic success.[44] He linked beauty to sacredness, positing it as a boundary-affirming standard that fosters social and moral cohesion, in contrast to kitsch, which he viewed as a profane desecration of the human form and environment.[44] For Scruton, true aesthetic experience requires imagination and judgment, enabling beauty to testify to truth and goodness, much like in classical triads from Plato onward.[44] Critiquing twentieth-century modernism, Scruton decried its "flight from beauty" as a cult of ugliness, exemplified by conceptual art like Duchamp's readymades or Warhol's repetitions, which he dismissed as aesthetically vacant and "downright stupid" for prioritizing shock over harmony.[44] In the BBC documentary Why Beauty Matters (2009), he traced this decline to consumerist deconsecration and avant-garde iconoclasm, arguing that the abandonment of representational ideals in art, architecture, and music erodes human flourishing by severing aesthetic experience from reverence and proportion.[45] Scruton advocated restoring beauty's pursuit as essential for cultural renewal, insisting it demands education in taste to discern genuine fittingness amid profane alternatives like pornography, which he contrasted with erotic art's respectful idealization.[44] His aesthetics thus integrated philosophy with cultural critique, emphasizing beauty's role in affirming the rational ordering of the world.[44]Philosophy of Sex, Religion, and Culture
Scruton's philosophy of sex, articulated primarily in his 1986 book Sexual Desire: A Philosophical Investigation, posits that sexual desire is an intentional state directed toward the other person as an embodied subject, distinct from mere animal appetite or physical arousal. He contends that its fulfillment requires mutual recognition and embodiment, culminating in erotic love that integrates body and soul, rather than detached pleasure-seeking.[46] Scruton critiques lust—defined as desire stripped of erotic fulfillment—as dehumanizing, and perversion as a deflection from the natural aim of union oriented toward the other's individuality and potential for lasting commitment.[47] This framework elevates marital fidelity as the context where sexual desire achieves its moral and psychological telos, countering the sexual revolution's emphasis on liberation from norms, which he argued eroded institutional supports like shame and promise, fostering instead a culture of transient encounters devoid of interpersonal depth.[48] [49] In his treatment of religion, Scruton rejected both dogmatic atheism and fundamentalist zealotry, advocating instead for the sacred as an emergent feature of human intentionality extended to the world. In The Soul of the World (2014), he defends religious experience against scientific reductionism, arguing that rituals, symbols, and beliefs—such as those in Christianity—embody a "desecrating intentionality" that responds to the mystery of existence without requiring literal theism.[50] He describes the sacred as arising from interpersonal attitudes overreaching toward the transcendent, fostering communal bonds and moral order, even if God remains a postulate of human longing rather than empirical fact.[51] Scruton viewed desecration—through materialism or iconoclasm—as a loss of this animating "soul," paralleling his cultural critiques, and emphasized religion's role in preserving the solemnity of birth, death, and covenant against profane commodification.[52] [53] Scruton's philosophy of culture intertwined sex and religion within a broader defense of tradition as the repository of tested values sustaining human societies. He argued that culture, far from arbitrary constructs, embodies inherited pieties—family, homeland, and ritual—that provide the "oikos" of belonging, critiquing modernist disruptions like mass democracy and globalism for atomizing individuals into consumers rather than co-heirs of a shared patrimony.[54] In works such as The Meaning of Conservatism (1980), he portrayed high culture (art, architecture, literature) as cultivating aesthetic and moral discernment, essential for countering the "culture of repudiation" that dismisses beauty and hierarchy in favor of egalitarian flux.[55] Sexual and religious norms, for Scruton, were cultural bulwarks against nihilism, where tradition's "prejudices" enable unreflective virtue, as opposed to rationalist schemes that invite total upheaval; he warned that eroding these—via no-fault divorce or secular iconoclasm—yields social fragmentation, evidenced by rising isolation and institutional distrust in post-1960s Europe.[56] [57]Critiques of Modernism and Postmodernism
Scruton mounted a philosophical critique of modernism as a cultural and aesthetic movement that severed artistic expression from its roots in tradition, beauty, and human settlement, substituting ideological experimentation for enduring forms. In his 1979 work The Aesthetics of Architecture, he rejected functionalist and rationalist doctrines—epitomized by Le Corbusier's machine-like designs—as prioritizing abstract utility over the sympathetic adaptation to human needs and environments, resulting in structures that alienate inhabitants from their surroundings.[43] Modernist buildings, Scruton argued, often eschew ornament and historical reference, producing uniform, gimmick-laden facades that fail to evoke individuality or communal belonging, thereby contributing to urban ugliness and social disconnection.[58] He extended this analysis to modernism's broader cultural impact, contending that its ego-driven rupture with pre-modern vernacular styles—characterized by seamless streetscapes and contextual harmony—inherently degrades the built environment compared to organic, tradition-informed development.[59] In Modern Culture (1998), Scruton traced modernism's desecration of sacred cultural forms to the Enlightenment's displacement of faith by aesthetics, arguing that this shift engendered a "culture of repudiation" where high art's religious origins are dismissed in favor of shock-value populism and mass entertainment.[60] He posited that modernism's pursuit of ethical visions through perpetual innovation perpetuates a cycle of novelty without consolation, trapping art in an unending quest for sincerity amid kitsch and cliché, while undermining the redemptive role of beauty in human life.[61] Popular culture, in Scruton's view, amplifies this erosion by infiltrating academia and eroding distinctions between the serious and the trivial, fostering a society adrift without transcendent anchors.[62] Scruton's assessment of postmodernism built upon these foundations, portraying it not as a corrective but as modernism's nihilistic successor, which embraces relativism, irony, and adversarial rhetoric to dismantle objective truth and institutional legitimacy. He characterized postmodern literature and theory as inherently polemical, fixated on unmasking the "ruses" sustaining social order while evading substantive engagement with human experience.[63] In Fools, Frauds and Firebrands (2015, revised from Thinkers of the New Left, 1985), Scruton dissected postmodern luminaries like Jacques Lacan and Gilles Deleuze as frauds whose esoteric jargon masks intellectual vacuity, reducing humanities discourse to obfuscation and power struggles rather than reasoned inquiry.[64] This critique framed postmodernism as a solvent of civilized norms, prioritizing subversion over construction and exacerbating modernity's loss of faith with a secular utilitarianism that discounts sovereignty, religion, and national identity.[65] Scruton maintained that such tendencies, by scorning inherited values, propel a "postmodern future" devoid of concrete freedoms grounded in obedience to tested institutions.[66]Political Philosophy and Conservatism
Defense of Tradition and National Identity
Roger Scruton viewed tradition as the accumulated residue of human experience, embodying practical wisdom that abstract reasoning alone could not replicate, and essential for maintaining social stability against the disruptions of rapid change. In The Meaning of Conservatism (1980), he described conservatism as arising from the sentiment that "good things are easily destroyed, but not easily created," advocating a disposition to cherish and repair inherited institutions like family, church, and law rather than dismantle them in pursuit of utopian ideals.[67][68] This defense positioned tradition not as blind adherence but as a rational response to the organic growth of societies, where precedents tested by time offer guidance superior to ideological blueprints. Scruton drew on Edmund Burke's critique of the French Revolution, arguing that traditions foster the "little platoons" of civil society that underpin voluntary cooperation and moral order.[69] Central to Scruton's philosophy was oikophilia, the innate love of home and hearth extending to neighborhood, landscape, and nation, which he presented as the affective foundation for conserving both natural and cultural environments. In How to Think Seriously About the Planet: The Case for an Environmental Conservatism (2012), Scruton argued that human settlement motivates stewardship through this sentiment, countering rootless cosmopolitanism that severs people from their places and erodes incentives for long-term care.[70][71] Oikophilia, for Scruton, animates traditions by binding generations to shared rituals, language, and customs, creating the loyalty necessary for self-restraining governance rather than coercive universalism. He contended that without this attachment, societies devolve into atomized individuals prone to state overreach or tribal conflict, as evidenced by the failures of multicultural policies that dilute unifying cultural narratives.[72] Scruton extended this to national identity, asserting in England and the Need for Nations (2004) that a nation comprises "a people settled in a certain territory, who share institutions, customs and a sense of history," forming the precondition for democratic accountability and the reconciliation of competing interests within a defined "we."[73] He maintained that "national loyalty is founded in the love of place, of the customs and traditions that have been inscribed in the landscape," distinguishing patriotic attachment—"by right" to one's people and territory—from aggressive nationalism, while warning that supranational entities like the European Union undermine sovereignty by imposing unaccountable governance that ignores local moral ideals and privileged relations.[73][73] For Scruton, preserving national identity against globalist erosion was vital, as it sustains the voluntary associations and inherited norms that enable free societies to endure, with empirical support in the historical success of nation-states in fostering peace and prosperity compared to empires or federations lacking shared allegiance.[74][73] In How to Be a Conservative (2014), he reiterated that national loyalty, not abstract liberalism, underpins democracy, urging resistance to policies that prioritize open borders over cultural continuity.[75][74]
Opposition to Totalitarianism and Globalism
Scruton identified totalitarianism as arising from ideologies that rationalize resentment and recruit the disaffected into movements aimed at abolishing established institutions such as law, property, and religion.[76] In his analysis, totalitarian systems, exemplified by Soviet communism, invert cause and effect through flawed economic theories like the labor theory of value, leading to tyrannical governance that suppresses individual agency and national traditions.[76] He argued that such regimes thrive on the destruction of mediating structures between the state and the individual, fostering dependence and eroding the voluntary associations essential to civil society.[77] His opposition was informed by direct observation during the Cold War, where he viewed communism not merely as an economic failure but as a profound assault on human dignity and cultural inheritance. Scruton critiqued the Western tendency to appease totalitarian foes, insisting that free societies must defend their sovereignty against ideologies that demand unconditional loyalty over reasoned allegiance.[78] In works like Notes from Underground (2014), he depicted the underground resistance in Eastern Europe as a moral bulwark against communist conformity, emphasizing truth-telling and personal responsibility as antidotes to ideological lies.[79] Extending this critique to globalism, Scruton warned that supranational entities like the European Union represent a transfer of legitimate powers from accountable nation-states to unaccountable bureaucracies, mirroring totalitarian centralization by undermining democratic consent and national self-determination.[80] In his 2004 pamphlet England and the Need for Nations, he contended that the post-World War II project of European integration, driven by elites from defeated nations, erodes the "we" of national loyalty, which fosters social trust and mitigates globalization's disruptive forces.[73] The nation-state, he maintained, provides the framework for peace, prosperity, and human rights defense by rooting governance in inherited customs and territorial allegiance, rather than abstract cosmopolitan ideals that dilute accountability.[81] Scruton further linked unchecked globalism to cultural fragmentation and vulnerability to threats like terrorism, as explored in The West and the Rest: Globalization and the Terrorist Threat (2002), where he argued that erosion of national boundaries invites jihadist ideologies by weakening the civilizational self-assertion needed for defense.[82] He advocated reviving national sovereignty to blunt globalization's excesses, positing that only through the nation-state can citizens negotiate trade, migration, and international relations while preserving the inherited order that sustains liberty.[83] This stance positioned globalism as a contemporary peril akin to totalitarianism, both prioritizing imposed unity over organic, bottom-up affiliations.[84]Views on Feminism, Monarchy, and Sovereignty
Scruton critiqued radical feminism for seeking to dismantle foundational Western modes of thought, distinguishing it from earlier advocates of women's suffrage whom he regarded more favorably.[85] He argued that academic disciplines such as women's studies prioritize ideological conformity over genuine critical thinking, rendering questioning of feminist premises "essentially made impossible" through curriculum design and pedagogical methods that embed orthodoxy from the outset.[86] In his 1986 book Sexual Desire: A Philosophical Investigation, Scruton explored human sexuality through a lens of interpersonal embodiment and mutual esteem, countering feminist deconstructions by insisting that sexual desire inherently aims toward erotic fulfillment in committed relations rather than detached individualism or power dynamics.[46][87] Scruton defended constitutional monarchy as a stabilizing institution that transcends partisan conflict, describing it as "the light above politics, which shines down on the human bustle from a calmer and more exalted sphere."[88] He viewed the monarch as embodying the state's continuity and fragility in a single person, thereby humanizing authority and fostering national loyalty without the divisiveness of elective office.[89] This arrangement, in his analysis, ensures succession by law rather than choice, preserving pomp and ceremony as symbols of inherited order amid democratic flux.[90] Central to Scruton's political philosophy was the advocacy for national sovereignty as the bedrock of legitimate governance and cultural cohesion. In his 2004 pamphlet England and the Need for Nations, he contended that the nation-state—defined by a sovereign territory, shared laws, and inherited identity—forms the optimal unit for securing peace, prosperity, and individual rights, supplanting tribal or imperial alternatives.[73] Scruton warned against supranational projects, such as European integration, that dilute sovereignty by transferring loyalty from elected national parliaments to unelected bureaucracies, thereby undermining democratic accountability and the "oikeipolis" of homeland settlement.[81] He emphasized that national identity arises from territorial jurisdiction and voluntary allegiance, enabling citizens to assume responsibility for their polity in ways global cosmopolitanism cannot replicate.[83]Personal Interests and Later Life
Rural Life, Wine, and Musical Compositions
Scruton purchased Sunday Hill Farm in Wiltshire in the early 1990s, restoring the dilapidated property over subsequent decades into a functional homestead that embodied his vision of rooted rural existence.[91] He resided there for approximately 30 years with his family, engaging in hands-on farming activities such as livestock management and crop cultivation, while advocating for sustainable local agriculture amid challenges faced by smallholders in converting grass to meat and dairy.[92] This endeavor reflected his broader philosophical commitment to conserving the English countryside as a human artifact shaped by generations, rather than pristine wilderness, and he critiqued policies like the European Union's Common Agricultural Policy for eroding rural traditions and landscapes.[93] Scruton documented farm life in works such as News from Somewhere (2004), portraying it as a microcosm of enduring communal values, and coined the term "Scrutopia" for his property, which later hosted educational summer programs immersing participants in philosophy amid practical rural pursuits like farm walks and locally sourced meals.[94] Scruton's affinity for wine stemmed from early explorations that evolved into a philosophical appreciation of its cultural and sensory dimensions, viewing it as emblematic of civilized enjoyment and historical continuity.[95] In his 2009 book I Drink Therefore I Am: A Philosopher's Guide to Wine, published by Continuum, he blended memoir with analysis, recounting his awakening to wine's nuances during travels and arguing for its intrinsic value in fostering discernment and social ritual, akin to Plato's praise of it as humanity's finest gift from the gods.[96] Scruton emphasized connoisseurship over mere consumption, critiquing blind tasting for severing wine from its narrative context and traditions, and positioned it within aesthetics as a medium revealing human perception's depth.[97] Beyond analytical writings on music, Scruton pursued composition, self-taught with minimal external guidance, culminating in two operas staged during his lifetime.[98] His first, The Minister (1998), marked an initial foray into musical drama, receiving limited public performances that satisfied his creative ambitions despite modest reception.[99] The second, Violet (2005), centered on the life of Violet Gordon-Woodhouse, a early-20th-century British harpsichordist and early music advocate, with Scruton providing both libretto and score to explore themes of artistic dedication amid personal tumult. These works underscored his belief in music's capacity for narrative and emotional integration, drawing from classical forms while prioritizing thematic coherence over avant-garde experimentation.[100]Marriages, Family, and Philanthropy
Scruton married Danielle Lafitte in September 1973 at the Brompton Oratory in Knightsbridge, London; the couple divorced in 1979.[9][101] In 1996, he married Sophie Jeffreys, an architectural historian whom he met while fox hunting in Wiltshire; the marriage lasted until his death and produced two children.[8][23][16] The couple's son, Samuel (born 1998), and daughter, Lucy, grew up at Sunday Hill Farm near Brinkworth, Wiltshire, where Scruton and Jeffreys restored the property and embraced a rural lifestyle emphasizing family, tradition, and self-sufficiency.[23][102] Jeffreys collaborated with Scruton on intellectual projects, including the establishment of educational initiatives in Eastern Europe starting in 1999, while balancing family responsibilities amid frequent travel.[103] In philanthropy, Scruton co-founded the Jan Hus Educational Foundation in 1978 (initially based in Oxford) to aid dissident intellectuals under communist rule in Czechoslovakia.[9][37] Operating clandestinely, the foundation organized underground philosophy seminars, smuggled Western texts, and provided academic support to persecuted scholars, with Scruton traveling under the codename "Wiewórka" (Polish for squirrel) to evade detection.[9][16] He served as a trustee from 1980 onward, and the organization persisted post-1989 Velvet Revolution, now active in the Czech Republic and Slovakia to promote liberal education and cultural preservation.[37][16] This effort reflected his commitment to defending Western intellectual traditions against totalitarianism, though it exposed him to risks including arrests of associates.[16]Controversies and Defenses
Tobacco Company Funding Claims
In January 2002, a leaked email revealed that philosopher Roger Scruton, through his public relations firm Horsell's Farm Enterprises co-run with his wife, had been receiving a £4,500 monthly retainer from Japan Tobacco International (JTI), the world's third-largest cigarette manufacturer, since at least 2000.[104][105] In the email, dated October 2001, Scruton proposed increasing the fee to £5,500 per month in exchange for efforts to "place an article every two months in one or other of the major newspapers or journals," aiming to counter anti-smoking regulations and promote arguments for smoker autonomy.[104][106] Scruton, a longtime pipe smoker who advocated for adult liberty in tobacco use, had not disclosed this financial arrangement in his contemporaneous writings.[107] Scruton's relevant outputs included a 2001 pamphlet published by the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA), titled WHO, What and Why?, which criticized the World Health Organization's proposed Framework Convention on Tobacco Control for overreaching into national sovereignty and diverting resources from priorities like vaccination campaigns in developing countries.[108][105] He also penned pro-tobacco-liberty articles for outlets such as The Spectator and The Wall Street Journal Europe, arguing against advertising bans and public smoking restrictions as infringements on personal choice and cultural norms.[104][109] The IEA, while not directly funding the pamphlet via tobacco money in this instance, had established ties to the industry through prior donations and shared free-market opposition to regulation.[110] The disclosures prompted The Spectator to terminate Scruton's contributions, followed by The Wall Street Journal Europe, which initially defended his intellectual independence but ultimately severed ties for failing to declare the conflict of interest.[111] Coverage in outlets like The Guardian and The Independent framed the arrangement as a covert influence operation, though conservative-leaning The Telegraph emphasized the non-disclosure as the core ethical lapse rather than the substance of Scruton's anti-regulatory stance.[104][106] Scruton acknowledged the oversight in a statement to the British Medical Journal, conceding, "I should have declared an interest," while maintaining that his expressed views on tobacco policy aligned with his longstanding philosophical commitment to individual responsibility over state paternalism and were not fabricated for payment.[107] He continued to defend such positions in later works, viewing anti-smoking campaigns as emblematic of broader cultural erosion of voluntary association and tradition.[112] The episode highlighted tensions between intellectual advocacy and transparency, with no evidence of fabricated arguments but criticism centered on undisclosed incentives potentially undermining perceived impartiality.[109]2019 Dismissal from Housing Commission
In January 2019, Roger Scruton was appointed unpaid chairman of the UK government's Building Better, Building Beautiful Commission, tasked with promoting high-quality architectural design to counter modernist ugliness in urban development. The role aligned with Scruton's longstanding advocacy for aesthetic conservatism in the built environment, as articulated in works like The Aesthetics of Architecture.[113] On 9 April 2019, the New Statesman published an interview with Scruton conducted by deputy editor George Eaton, featuring selectively edited quotes that provoked widespread condemnation. Scruton remarked that Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán viewed philanthropist George Soros as establishing an "empire" in Budapest to "undermine the character" of the nation through funded NGOs, emphasizing cultural rather than ethnic motivations. He described China's Communist regime as treating citizens like "robots," likening each individual to a "replica" under surveillance and control, and dismissed "Islamophobia" as a "propaganda word" invented to stifle criticism of Islamist extremism, arguing it conflated legitimate concerns about integration with irrational prejudice.[33] These excerpts, presented with ellipses omitting context, were interpreted by critics as endorsing antisemitic tropes, Sinophobia, and denial of discrimination against Muslims.[32] Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick dismissed Scruton the following day, 10 April 2019, stating the comments were "deeply concerning" and incompatible with public service, without awaiting Scruton's response or independent verification. The decision drew accusations of a "kangaroo court" process, amplified by social media outrage and left-leaning outlets, reflecting broader institutional pressures against conservative intellectuals. Scruton contested the portrayal, providing the full transcript to demonstrate that his views critiqued ideological threats to sovereignty and secular order, not ethnic groups per se.[113] Subsequent scrutiny revealed editorial manipulations: The Spectator obtained the unedited recording, exposing how Eaton's cuts distorted Scruton's nuanced discussion of Soros's political activism as an assault on national cohesion, rather than a shadowy cabal. The New Statesman, acknowledging its left-wing editorial slant, issued an apology on 8 July 2019 for "failing to represent Sir Roger’s views accurately," retracted misleading elements, and settled a legal complaint with damages paid to Scruton.[114] [115] Jenrick, after an internal review, described the sacking as "regrettable" and reinstated Scruton as co-chair on 23 July 2019, affirming his contributions to the commission's interim report advocating classical proportions and local vernacular in housing.[31] The episode underscored vulnerabilities to media-driven cancellations, where unverified snippets override substantive records, particularly for figures challenging progressive orthodoxies on identity and globalization.Responses to Accusations on Social Views
Scruton repeatedly rebutted accusations of homophobia by arguing that the term itself, originating from Freudian theories of infantile sexuality now largely discredited, pathologizes ordinary moral judgments and aversion without permitting philosophical scrutiny. In his 2002 essay "Sin Bin," he defended his analysis in Sexual Desire (1986), clarifying that he viewed homosexuality as differing from heterosexuality in its intentional structure but not inherently perverse, and noted positive reception from gay publications like Gay News, which selected his novel Fortnight's Anger (1973) as the year's best. He contended that labeling dissent as phobia evades substantive debate on sexual morality's role in sustaining social bonds.[116] Critics, including Martha Nussbaum in a 1986 New York Review of Books critique, charged Scruton's framework in Sexual Desire with sexism for emphasizing gendered embodiment and the teleology of desire toward reproduction and union, implying critiques of non-procreative acts. Scruton responded in a subsequent exchange by accusing detractors of vagueness in distinctions and haste in rejecting his distinctions between lust, perversion, and erotic love, insisting his arguments rested on phenomenological first-person experience rather than ideological fiat. He maintained that traditional sexual virtues like fidelity and modesty protect innocence, which modern egalitarian critiques erode without causal regard for societal cohesion.[46] Accusations of broader social bigotry, including misogyny and prejudice against non-traditional identities, intensified during the 2019 controversy over a selectively edited New Statesman interview, where he was portrayed as endorsing conspiracies and outdated norms. In his rebuttal, Scruton dismissed claims of deeming homosexuality "not normal" as unspecified and unoffensive on biological grounds, reiterating that such differences warrant discussion without equating them to perversion or demanding state-sanctioned equivalence in marriage, which he saw as conflating private consent with public institutions. He rejected "phobia" suffixes as rhetorical tools akin to "Islamophobia," which he argued conflate critique of radical ideologies with irrational fear, thereby shielding behaviors incompatible with Western liberties from accountability. The government's initial dismissal was reversed after the New Statesman issued an apology on April 11, 2019, for misrepresentation, affirming Scruton's comments critiqued Soros's political networks in Hungary without antisemitic intent.[117][118] On feminism, Scruton countered portrayals of his views as reactionary by framing them as defenses of sexual asymmetry and domesticity against what he termed enforced conformity in academia and policy. In interviews, he argued that feminism's doctrinal hegemony suppresses inquiry into gender's biological and cultural realities, such as women's primary attachment imprinting the love of home, without evidence that egalitarian reforms enhance human flourishing. He did not advocate discrimination but warned that abstract rights claims, post-1945, prioritize individual autonomy over inherited pieties, leading to familial fragmentation observable in rising divorce rates and single-parent households since the 1960s.[119]Recognition, Legacy, and Death
Awards, Knighthood, and Honors
In the 2016 Queen's Birthday Honours, Scruton was knighted as a Knight Bachelor for services to philosophy, teaching, and public education, with the honour announced on 10 June 2016.[120] In 1998, the Czech Republic awarded Scruton the First Class Medal of Merit, one of the nation's highest state honors, in recognition of his efforts to support dissidents and establish the underground Jan Hus Educational Foundation during the communist era.[121] Scruton received the Medal for Courage and Integrity from the Lech Kaczyński Foundation in Poland in 2016, honoring his philosophical contributions and resistance to totalitarianism.[122] On 15 November 2019, the Czech Senate presented Scruton with its Silver Medal to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the Velvet Revolution, acknowledging his role in promoting freedom and education in the region.[123] In December 2019, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán presented Scruton with the Commander's Cross with Star of the Order of Merit of the Republic of Hungary, recognizing his defense of Western civilization and support for Central European sovereignty.[124]| Year | Award | Issuing Authority |
|---|---|---|
| 1998 | Medal of Merit (First Class) | Czech Republic |
| 2016 | Knight Bachelor | United Kingdom |
| 2016 | Medal for Courage and Integrity | Lech Kaczyński Foundation (Poland) |
| 2019 | Silver Medal | Czech Senate |
| 2019 | Commander's Cross with Star of the Order of Merit | Republic of Hungary |
Posthumous Influence and Scrutopia
Following Scruton's death on 12 January 2020, the Roger Scruton Legacy Foundation was established to perpetuate his intellectual contributions, focusing on the conservation of humane values, the defense of Western civilization, and the promotion of the traditional family through events, lectures, seminars, and research initiatives.[125] The foundation organizes annual activities such as the Roger Scruton Symposium, held in London on 21 October 2025 to mark the fifth anniversary of his passing, featuring discussions on topics including his views on beauty, conservatism, and Central Europe; and conferences like "Prospects for Anglo-American Conservatism" on 27 June 2025.[126] These efforts aim to foster networks aligned with Scruton's emphasis on rooted communities, aesthetic tradition, and cultural sovereignty.[125] In Hungary, where Scruton received support from the government for conservative cultural projects during his lifetime, his influence persists through the Hungarian Scruton Hub, founded in 2023 to promote his works domestically and internationally via seminars, publications, and community events. The Hungarian state allocated £1.5 million in 2021 to establish a chain of coffee shops dedicated to Scruton, with the first opening in Budapest in November of that year, featuring memorabilia from his life and writings to encourage public engagement with his philosophy.[127] Prime Minister Viktor Orbán described Scruton as a "loyal friend of freedom-loving Hungarians," reflecting the alignment of his ideas with national efforts to preserve traditional European identity.[128] Scrutopia, Scruton's conceptual ideal of self-sustaining rural communities emphasizing settlement, local governance, and aesthetic harmony—contrasting urban alienation and bureaucratic centralization—has been realized posthumously through the Scrutopia Summer School, initiated by him in 2017 and continued under the oversight of his widow, Sophie Scruton.[129] The program offers week-long retreats with lectures, seminars, tours, music, and discussions immersing participants in Scruton's philosophy, drawing speakers to explore themes of beauty, tradition, and human flourishing; fellowships support attendance for scholars and students.[91][130] Held annually, it sustains his vision of philosophical dialogue in convivial settings, with 2025 sessions emphasizing debate and new intellectual friendships.[131] Posthumous publications have further extended Scruton's reach, including Wagner's Parsifal: The Good Friday Music, released in May 2020, which defends the opera's spiritual depth against modern critiques of its perceived excesses, completed shortly before his death.[132] Literary executor Mark Dooley has compiled additional volumes from Scruton's notes and essays, addressing ongoing cultural debates in aesthetics and conservatism.[133] These works, alongside foundation-led initiatives, underscore Scruton's enduring role in countering secular relativism with arguments for sacred order and national particularity.[134]Final Years and Passing
In mid-2019, Scruton experienced health deterioration that led to a medical evaluation, resulting in a diagnosis of cancer, which he publicly acknowledged in August.[135] Despite undergoing treatment for lung cancer, he persisted in his scholarly and journalistic work, including composing a reflective article on the preceding year's trials for The Spectator in December 2019, where he alluded to consultations with an oncologist amid broader personal and political upheavals.[136] [9] Residing on his farm in Wiltshire, England, Scruton maintained a routine of writing and local engagements until near the end, as recounted by his biographer Mark Dooley, who visited him shortly before his death and noted Scruton's ongoing productivity even amid physical decline.[137] Scruton died on January 12, 2020, at age 75, passing peacefully at home surrounded by family after a six-month battle with the disease.[138] [139] His final days reflected a stoic acceptance, with Dooley describing Scruton as intellectually engaged to the last, unbowed by illness or prior controversies.[140]Selected Bibliography
Scruton authored over 40 books spanning philosophy, aesthetics, politics, culture, and fiction.[141] His writings emphasized conservative thought, the value of tradition, beauty in art and architecture, and critiques of modern ideologies.[141] Selected bibliography highlights major non-fiction contributions:- Art and Imagination: A Study in the Romantic Conception of Art (1974)[141]
- The Aesthetics of Architecture (1979)[141]
- The Meaning of Conservatism (1980)[141]
- From Descartes to Wittgenstein: A Short History of Modern Philosophy (1981)[141]
- A Dictionary of Political Thought (1982)[141]
- Sexual Desire: A Moral Philosophy of the Erotic (1986)[141]
- The Philosopher on Dover Beach and Other Essays (1989)[141]
- An Intelligent Person’s Guide to Philosophy (1996)[141]
- The Aesthetics of Music (1997)[141]
- England: An Elegy (2001)[141]
- A Political Philosophy: Arguments for Conservatism (2006)[141]
- Beauty (2009)[141]
- How to Think Seriously About the Planet: The Case for an Environmental Conservatism (2012)[141]
- How to Be a Conservative (2014)[141]
- Fools, Frauds and Firebrands: Thinkers of the New Left (2015)[141]
- On Human Nature (2017)[141]
- Conservatism: An Invitation to the Great Tradition (2018)[141]
- Music as an Art (2018)[141]