In the history of political thought, one of the most persistent tensions has been between the state and the sphere of culture. From ancient city-states to modern nation-states, the question has continually arisen as to whether political authority has the right to intervene in the production, distribution, and direction of culture.
Within non-liberal traditions, the state has not only been considered legitimate in doing so, but also the primary agent responsible for the cultural organization of society. In contrast, within the liberal tradition, this assumption has been increasingly challenged, and culture has been defined as a domain of voluntary human action; a domain in which any institutional intervention necessarily entails a restriction of pluralism and a deviation from the natural process of social evolution.
Culture, within this framework, is neither a “state product” nor a “designable engineering project,” but a network of voluntary actions producing meaning, identity, and value. Just as the economic market emerges from dispersed and decentralized individual actions, culture is likewise the outcome of free interaction among individuals within a given temporal span and social domain. In the same way that prices in a market tend toward their most efficient configuration when freed from central control, cultural values approach their “social optimum” when released from political intervention.
This is because culture, much like language, customary law, and the market itself, belongs to the class of spontaneous orders in human society. Such orders are not the product of design by any single mind or central institution, but rather the accumulated result of experience, selection, and interaction among millions of individuals over time. Hence, just as no state or authority can predefine the most efficient prices, it is equally incapable of designing the most desirable cultural values, symbols, or meanings.
The modern state—particularly in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, with the expansion of the nation-state project—transformed culture into one of the primary instruments of political cohesion. In this model, the state was not only the guardian of political order but also the architect of cultural identity. Formal education, cultural policies, and extensive arts funding were all directed toward the construction of an “official culture.”
However, rather than producing lasting social cohesion, this process in many cases generated new tensions: linguistic cleavages, ethnic divisions, and identity-based rivalries rooted in the state’s attempt to standardize culture. Although certain state-building projects may have succeeded through cultural engineering, this article is not concerned with the effectiveness of state-imposed culture, but rather with the legitimacy of the state in undertaking such a role. For the use of public resources to produce and promote a specific culture necessarily entails a violation of liberty and private property.
When the state enters the sphere of culture, it is inevitably forced to choose among plural and competing social values. Such choices, even when made with an intention of neutrality, in practice amount to privileging one cultural form over others. The result is that segments of society experience exclusion or marginalization. Consequently, state intervention in culture is not neutral; rather, it is inherently a producer of conflict, since in a pluralistic society there exists no single criterion by which one culture can be legitimately preferred over another.
Within this context, cultural funding becomes even more significant. When the state uses public resources to support specific cultural expressions, it is effectively engaging in compulsory redistribution in favor of a particular system of meaning. This not only conflicts with individual liberty of choice, but also distorts the natural competition between cultural forms. In a free system, cultures must be able to expand based on intrinsic appeal, communicative effectiveness, and persuasive power, rather than access to political funding.
One of the most significant consequences of state intervention in culture is the politicization of cultural life. When culture becomes dependent on public funding and political power, artists, writers, and cultural producers are inevitably compelled to enter into relations of dependence in order to sustain their activity. This dependency weakens the autonomy of cultural creativity and transforms it into an extension of political competition. As a result, culture ceases to be a sphere of free dialogue and creativity and instead becomes a field of ideological contestation. At this point, culture no longer performs its integrative or creative function; rather, it turns into a factor that intensifies social divisions.
From the perspective of classical liberalism, the state should refrain from producing or directing culture and instead assume the limited role of safeguarding liberty. The function of the state is not to define a desirable culture, but to protect the conditions under which individuals can freely produce and exchange their cultural expressions. This approach amounts to a form of institutional neutrality; a neutrality that allows cultures to evolve within a competitive and decentralized environment.
In such a setting, culture evolves not through political decision-making but through a natural process of trial and error. Ideas, languages, artistic styles, and collective identities develop through free interaction, and what persists is not the product of coercion but the outcome of voluntary human choice. Although this process may appear disorderly in the short term, in the long run it gives rise to the most dynamic and resilient form of cultural order; an order that emerges from below rather than being imposed from above.
In contrast, any attempt by the state to consolidate an official culture necessarily leads to a reduction in cultural diversity and the emergence of social resistance. In societies where culture is defined from above, latent social cleavages gradually develop, as different groups come to feel excluded from the official narrative. This condition fosters institutional distrust and deepens ethnic, linguistic, and religious divisions. In this regard, even policies that are ostensibly designed to “promote diversity,” including state support for local languages, often reproduce the same interventionist logic; that is, instead of allowing languages to evolve or decline within the natural context of social interaction, the state itself becomes involved in determining which languages should be taught and how public resources should be allocated among them.
This process, rather than reducing identity tensions, intensifies political competition over cultural resources and transforms language from a medium of communication and historical continuity into a political banner and a vehicle for institutional claims-making. In contrast, within a decentralized cultural order, these very differences can become a source of interaction and coexistence.
Finally, it can be concluded that the separation of the state from the sphere of culture is not merely an ideological preference, but an institutional necessity for preserving social cohesion in pluralistic societies. The state can only properly fulfill its role when it retreats from the position of a “cultural engineer” to that of a “guardian of liberty.” In such a case, culture ceases to be an instrument of political power and becomes a living social process in which no single center exists for the control of meaning.
Ultimately, liberalism in relation to culture does not imply indifference toward values, but rather the rejection of any political monopoly over the production of values. A society that delegates its culture to the state, in effect, delegates part of its liberty; and a society that returns culture to its citizens not only preserves cultural diversity, but also enables a more stable and less conflict-prone form of coexistence.