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Paper 1 Core Political Ideology · Liberalism (spec 2.1)

Liberalism · Notes

Sub-topic lookup view of the walk-through.

About these notes. This is the sub-topic lookup version. For the narrative scrollytelling lesson with the strand, dimension, thinker and core-idea figures, use the Walk-through. For active recall, use the MCQ Quiz. For comparison practice, use the Strand comparison exercise. The cards below open one at a time and cover everything Paper 1 Q3 expects you to know on liberalism: the two strands, the five named thinkers, the core ideas and the exam method.

Likely exam angles. The 24-mark question lands on a dimension (human nature, the state, the economy, society), on a core idea, or on a cross-cutting theme like democracy or freedom. Recent board questions: 2025 Q3b united on democracy; 2024 Q3a divided over the economy; 2023 Q3a fear of the state; Sample Q3a the role of the state. Each one is covered in the cards below.

1. What liberalism is - the shared base

Liberalism starts from an optimistic view of human nature and the primacy of the individual. Humans are rational creatures, capable of reason and logic, able to define their own best interests and make their own moral choices. The state is a necessary evil: necessary to avoid disorder, evil because it can remove individual liberty - so it must be limited.

What both liberal strands agree on

  • The individual first. The primacy of the individual in society over any group is the basis of liberal politics.
  • Rationalism. Humans are rational and of equal moral worth, capable of self-government - the optimism that separates liberalism from conservatism.
  • Fear of the state. All liberals are suspicious of the state and see it as a necessary evil; all accept the social contract (Locke), the harm principle (Mill) and constitutional limits. The 2023 mark scheme makes the shared fear an explicit unifying point.
  • Free market and private property. The 2024 mark scheme lists three economic agreements: both strands support a free-market economy, both support private property and reject large-scale state ownership (Locke), and both design the economy to enhance individual freedom.
The exam frame. The Pearson mark schemes lay liberalism questions out as agreement points and disagreement points. Learn each topic the same way: what the strands share, then where they split, then which weighs more.

2. Classical liberalism

The original strand. Spec definition: early liberals who believed individual freedom would best be achieved with the state playing a minimal role. Key thinkers: Locke, Wollstonecraft, Mill.

  • Human nature: egoistical individualism - rational, self-interested, self-reliant; capable of running their own lives (Locke, Mill). Each person is the best judge of their own interest. Wollstonecraft extended the claim to women: equally rational, so equally entitled to rights and freedoms.
  • The state: a necessary evil, minimal by design. Government by consent under the social contract (Locke); the only legitimate use of coercion is to prevent harm to others (Mill). The night-watchman state: defence, courts, the protection of property and contract, nothing more.
  • Society: a society of free rational individuals - foundational equality, formal equality before the law, meritocracy, tolerance and individuality (Mill).
  • The economy: laissez-faire free market, unfettered by the state - intervention undermines the 'invisible hand' of demand and supply. Private property predates the state (Locke); individuals should be self-sufficient, with no high taxes to fund welfare.
Democracy - handle with care. Classical liberals feared mass participation might create unrest. Mill, while supporting some extension of the franchise, was initially suspicious of mass democracy - power to the uneducated could destabilise society. The fear of the tyranny of the majority runs through the whole strand.

3. Modern liberalism

The re-evaluation. Spec definition: emerged as a reaction against free-market capitalism, believing this had led to many individuals not being free - freedom could no longer simply be defined as 'being left alone'. Key thinkers: Rawls, Friedan, with the later Mill pointing the way.

  • Human nature: still rational and self-interested, but adopting developmental individualism - humans need education, opportunity and freedom from material want to develop their full potential (Rawls).
  • The state: re-evaluated - less a threat to individual liberty, more its guarantor (Rawls). The enabling state: welfare, education, anti-discrimination law and progressive taxation can enhance freedom rather than threaten it. This is positive freedom: freedom to develop, not just freedom from interference.
  • Society: substantive equality of opportunity - real chances must be available to everyone, which requires state action. Friedan: socialised gender roles deny women development, so oppressive laws and social views must be overturned.
  • The economy: Keynesian managed capitalism - the state regulates the free market to protect vulnerable workers and funds a welfare state. Welfare can support individuals to become free and create a genuine meritocracy (Rawls).
The point of difference from Classical. Same rational individual, same fear of unchecked power - but Modern liberalism redefines freedom as the chance to develop, and turns the state from freedom's threat into freedom's guarantor. The Sample mark scheme calls the two positions 'diametrically opposed' on whether the state enhances or diminishes freedom.

4. Mill - the bridge between the strands

Do not file Mill rigidly under one strand - the authoring ruleset names 'treating JS Mill rigidly as classical or modern' as a known ideology error.

  • The classical Mill: the harm principle - individuals free to do anything except harm others, the only legitimate purpose of state coercion. Negative freedom at its sharpest. Tolerance: the popularity of a view does not necessarily make it correct.
  • The forward-pointing Mill: his belief that humans flourish through liberty and should develop their individuality looks ahead to developmental individualism - which is why the strand comparison lists him as 'Mill (later)' on the modern side.
  • On democracy: he feared the tyranny of the majority and, while supporting some extension of the franchise, was initially suspicious of mass democracy.
How to use the bridge. Mill shows the strands as one developing tradition rather than two unrelated camps. A sentence noting that the modern strand grows out of his developmental reading of liberty is a high-value evaluation point on any unity-or-division question.

5. The five Edexcel named thinkers

ThinkerKey workStrandWhat to use them for
Locke
(1632-1704)
Two Treatises of Government (1690)ClassicalSocial contract theory; government limited and based on consent from below; private property predates the state; the state maintains order so freedom is possible.
Wollstonecraft
(1759-1797)
A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792)ClassicalReason: women are rational and independent beings. Formal equality: full civil liberties and the right to a career.
Mill
(1806-1873)
On Liberty (1859)The bridgeThe harm principle; tolerance; fear of the tyranny of the majority; the developmental reading that links the strands.
Rawls
(1921-2002)
A Theory of Justice (1971)ModernTheory of justice: society must guarantee each citizen a life worth living. The veil of ignorance; the enabling state as freedom's guarantor.
Friedan
(1921-2006)
The Feminine Mystique (1963)ModernLegal equality: oppressive laws and social views must be overturned. Equal opportunity: women held back by the limited range of 'acceptable' jobs.
How to deploy them. Lead with the strands; the key thinkers add value to the strands, not the other way round. Working minimum: two named spec thinkers. An essay with no spec thinkers is capped at Level 2. Strong pairings: Locke's limited state against Rawls' enabling state; Wollstonecraft's formal equality against Friedan's equal opportunity - the same cause argued from opposite ends of the strand divide.

6. The core ideas - two readings each

Unlike conservatism, where core ideas map onto particular strands, every liberal core idea belongs to both strands - the strands read each idea differently. That double reading is the exam skill.

Core ideaWhat it meansThe strand readings
IndividualismThe primacy of the individual in society over any group.Egoistical (classical: self-reliant, best judge of own interest) vs developmental (modern: needs enabling conditions - Rawls).
Freedom / libertyThe ability and right to make decisions in your own interests; freedom is 'under the law'.Negative (being left alone - Mill's harm principle) vs positive (enabled to develop - Rawls). The deepest split.
The state'Necessary' to avoid disorder, 'evil' for its potential to remove liberty - so limited. Mechanistic theory: it serves the people, authority from below.Night-watchman (classical) vs enabling guarantor of freedom (modern). 'Diametrically opposed' (Sample MS).
RationalismHumans are rational creatures, capable of reason and logic - able to define their own best interests, creating a progressive society.The most shared of the six. The strands disagree only over what rational individuals need to act on their reason.
Equality / social justiceIndividuals are of equal value and should be treated impartially and fairly. Three layers: foundational, formal, equality of opportunity.Classical stops at formal equality and meritocracy (Wollstonecraft); modern pushes into substantive opportunity and social justice (Rawls, Friedan) - 'a significant departure' (2025 MS).
Liberal democracyBalances the will of the people, shown through elections, with limited government and respect for civil liberties.All support it over dictatorship and all fear the tyranny of the majority (Locke on contract); classical caution on the franchise (Mill) vs modern developmental participation.
Answer the question asked. The 2025 liberalism question (democracy) was the lowest-scoring 24-marker on the paper because candidates wrote prepared state-and-economy essays and relabelled them. Each core idea can carry its own question - learn the double reading for each, not one all-purpose classical-vs-modern story.

7. The four dimensions - agreement and disagreement

Human nature

Agreement: both strands see humans as rational, of equal moral worth and capable of self-government. Disagreement: egoistical individualism - humans flourish on their own (Locke, Mill) - against developmental individualism - humans need education, opportunity and freedom from material want to develop (Rawls, Friedan).

The state

Agreement: all liberals fear the state as a necessary evil; all accept the social contract (Locke), the harm principle (Mill) and constitutional limits. Disagreement: the night-watchman against the enabler. The 2023 mark scheme: the strands 'fear the state to different degrees'; the Sample mark scheme: 'diametrically opposed' on whether the state enhances or diminishes freedom.

The economy

Agreement: free market, private property, the individual as the motor of the economy (2024 mark scheme's three agreements). Disagreement: how free the market should be - the unfettered invisible hand against Keynesian regulation; and welfare - self-sufficiency and low taxes against the welfare state as a route to positive freedom and a genuine meritocracy (Rawls).

Society

Agreement: the priority of the individual, foundational equality, tolerance and meritocracy; both strands reject any society that subordinates the individual to the group. Disagreement: formal against substantive equality. Classical liberals settle for the law treating people the same (Wollstonecraft); modern liberals demand real chances for everyone, which requires welfare and anti-discrimination law (Rawls, Friedan).

The extra dimension - democracy (the 2025 question)

Agreement: all liberals prefer democracy to authoritarianism, with political rights and regular free and fair elections; all fear the tyranny of the majority unless based on some form of contract (Locke); all endorse constitutionalism, separation of powers and checks and balances. Disagreement: classical caution about mass participation and the franchise (Mill) against the modern view of participation as developmental; modern liberals accept a wider scope of democracy reaching into social justice, where classical liberals confine it to choosing a government. The tension: is democracy the best system, or merely the least bad?

The pattern to reuse. On every dimension the agreement is the liberal frame - individual, reason, contract, market - and the disagreement is what freedom requires inside it. That is the spine of almost every liberalism 24-marker.

8. Exam method - how the 24-marker is scored

  • Marks: 24, split AO1 8 / AO2 8 / AO3 8.
  • 'To what extent' is a question of degree - judge how much, not yes or no. Weigh whether agreement or disagreement is more significant.
  • Structure by theme, not by strand. Never write one paragraph per strand in sequence. Weave the strands together inside each theme - that is where the analysis marks live.
  • Lead with strands; thinkers in support. The key thinkers add value and meaning to the strands, not the other way round.
  • Answer the question asked. The 2025 examiner report punished prepared state-and-economy essays relabelled as democracy answers and 'simplistic classical-vs-modern splits' that never engaged with the question.
  • Two named spec thinkers minimum. No spec thinkers, or only one side argued, caps the answer at Level 2.
  • Judge as you go. Interim judgements through the essay score better than a one-line summary at the end.
  • Strands and thinkers only. Real-world politics is brief illustration at most - parties and current events belong in the UK Politics questions, not the ideology essay.
  • Use Mill with care. He is the bridge between the strands - filing him rigidly under one is a known error.
Past board questions to plan. 2025 Q3b: united in its ideas about democracy? 2024 Q3a: divided over its approach to the economy? 2023 Q3a: does liberalism have a fear of the state? Sample Q3a: do modern and classical liberals agree over the role of the state? A worked answer to the Sample question is at the end of the walk-through.
📜 Walk-throughThe narrative scrollytelling lesson with figures, mini-quizzes and the worked essay. 🧠 MCQ quiz15 questions across the strands, thinkers and core ideas. 📊 Strand comparisonClassical against Modern on each spec area; model answers from the Pearson mark schemes. 🧠 Standalone P1 quizSpec recall on thinkers, strands and key terms.