What a wonderful metaphor that creates for explaining
the problem I have with economic determinism and “the invisible hand of the
market.” Economists love to exclaim
TANSTAAFL!, “There aint no such thing as a free lunch.” They mean that economic relationships
determine all our other relationships, and they make a powerful case for their
point of view. There is an element of
economic self-interest even in our choice of who we love and what religion we
follow. The invisible hand is at work everywhere; economic determinism is
indeed a fact that we live with. But the
economists stop there. They act as if Economic Man is a complete description of
all humanity and inescapably explains everything. And that’s like saying that
gravity is so powerful, it’s not even worth the effort to attempt jumping. It’s as if, following Newton’s discovery, we’d
just sighed and given up. If we had the
same attitude about physics as economists do about economics, we’d still be
hiding in caves.
Humanity has worked thousands of years to overcome
gravity, from the invention of the inclined plane and the cart and the ladder
to the design of the space rocket. We’ve
done it because there were worthwhile things that needed being done, that just
couldn’t be done by accepting the inexorable victory of gravity. So we found
ways, and continue to do so every day. No
one person did it; it’s been a joint effort for humanity over millennia.
The reason physicists search so hard for
understandings about dark matter, stuff that isn’t even directly detectable by
any scientific instrument, is that there is significantly more of it in the
universe than there is ordinary matter.
Seeking, for example, to understand the structure and motion of galaxies
using only calculations including ordinary matter leads to completely erroneous
results. Stretching that metaphor even
farther, limiting our understanding of the possibilities for human behavior to behavioral
calculations involving only Economic Man
is like calculating gravitational effects ignoring dark matter. The dark matter of humanity is all the other
stuff, from altruism to anger to kinship ties, that go together to define our
full humanity. It cannot be ignored.
So, what I’m trying to say is that yes, economic
determinism is a legitimate fact of life to be dealt with. It too cannot be
ignored. Neither can the other
components of our behavior. The problem arises when we organize our behavior
around purely economic institutions and concepts, around corporations and rates
of return on investment and self interest, and the invisible hand of the market
becomes the scapegoat for behaviors that represent the worst, not the best, of
our nature. As we have labored over millennia to elude the limits of gravity,
and succeeded, so we need to work on social arrangements and institutions, from
government regulation of unconscionable behaviors to “social markets” that take
into account just pricing and needs. The
focus of our behavior needs to include achieving our best, not just our most
profitable outcomes. We will not understand or actualize our own universe within, or help the world around us become a better place, until we have learned to do so.
3 comments:
Joe, I wrote a lengthy response to your blog, but the cotton pickin' system did not publish it. Very frustrating. I will have to send you my thinking separately. I don't know what is wrong with the Blogger.
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Ray. Thanks for your effort. It may be that there's a limit on the length of comments - though I can't find anything that says so. It might just be one of those quirks of your particular system interacting with blogger. I usually when posting or commenting use MSWord to draft it and then copy and paste. You might see what happens when you do that - it saves rewriting anyway.
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