Thursday, February 9, 2012

The Man Bitten by the State


Old texts often provide valuable wisdom. Sometimes such knowledge is lost, as anybody but the staunchest proponent of the Whig theory of history would agree. Sometimes such knowledge is rediscovered, perhaps entirely independently or perhaps by inheritance through history. To identify whether this rediscovery actually occurs requires the avoidance of “presentist” and “Whiggish” fallacies, in which one tries to find modern ideas in any little statement or assumes that one has superior knowledge today. There is a related question of incommensurability between ideas of recent and ancient years. Whether this is a problem depends on the context and requires making an historical judgment. Finding pearls of wisdom present in both old and new texts can also teach humility – one cannot discount the past simply because it is not recent.

I think I have found a small piece of such wisdom from past and present. Consider the following from George Fyler Townshend’s English translation of Aesop’s Fables.

The Man Bitten by a Dog

A MAN who had been bitten by a Dog went in quest of someone who might heal him. A friend, meeting him and learning what he wanted, said, “If you would be cured, take a piece of bread, and dip it in the blood from your wound, and go and give it to the Dog that bit you.” The Man who had been bitten laughed at this advice and said, “Why? If I should do so, it would be as if I should beg every Dog in the town to bite me.”

Benefits bestowed upon the evil-disposed increase their means of injuring you. 

There are various other renderings of this fable.  Most notably, a common alternative to the last sentence is “[h]e who proclaims himself ready to buy up his enemies will never want a supply of them.” But I focus on the first of these, for it more readily generalizes to institutional rather than individual evils.

The fable brings to my mind Ayn Rand’s concept of the "sanction of the victim.” The phrase originates from her novel Atlas Shrugged. If you’re a fan, then here’s more ammunition; if you’re not, then here’s an alternative expression of a similar idea. For canonical statements of the idea, check out http://aynrandlexicon.com/lexicon/sanction_of_the_victim.html#order_1. A particularly succinct statement and generalization of the concept appeared in a recent article by Ben O’Neill (http://mises.org/daily/5879#note3).

Rand's reference to the "sanction of the victim" was used to refer more specifically to the fact that victims supply the tools of their own destruction to their destroyers, who are incapable of production themselves. … [S]he did regard the moral sanction of the victim as being a necessary tool supplied to one's destroyers. It is in this sense that I use the term.

My usage of the concept includes both the material support and moral sanction of the destroyers.

Although I do believe one can usefully apply the concept of the "sanction of the victim” to things other than politics, I have in mind its application to politics. In particular, I have in mind a radical libertarian (anarchist) application to the ideological support of the state and its existence. For those inclined to support just limited government, then you can restrict its application to whatever you think constitutes unjust government. With limited exception, it is unviable to not provide material support to the state - consider what happens if you don’t pay your taxes. But one most certainly need not provide it or its policies with ideological support, and should go further by opposing them.

Don’t bestow the benefit of your ideological submission upon “evil-disposed” institutions. Otherwise you’ll be feeding your blood-soaked bread to the dogs – and they will eat you alive.

Sunday, January 22, 2012

The Civilizing Process - Pinker Meets Hoppe?


The present post continues with commentary on Steve Pinker’s interview concerning his new book on The Better Angels of Our Nature.

Throughout the entire interview, I kept thinking of Hans-Hermann Hoppe’s work, especially chapter 1 of Democracy: The God that Failed – “On Time Preference, Government, and the Process of Decivilization.” Hoppe and Pinker deal with related topics, though they contradicted or complimented each other in various ways. As it turns out, both authors cite the German sociologist Norbert Elias concerning his two volumes on The Civilizing Process – Volume I on The History of Manners and Volume II on State Formation and Civilization.

In Hoppe’s treatment, the “process of civilization” is initiated by savings-investment, which generates a tendency toward a fall in the rate of time preference.  His discussion is based on the following:

The saver exchanges present (consumer) goods for future (capital) goods with the expectation that these will help produce a larger supply of present goods in the future. If he expected otherwise he would not save. If these expectations prove correct, and if everything else remains the same, the marginal utility of present goods relative to that of future ones will fall. His time-preference rate will be lower.

Moreover,

Higher wage rates imply a rising supply of present goods for previous nonsavers. Thus, even those individuals who were previously nonsavers will see their personal time-preference rates fall.

Hoppe provides further reasons relating to improved health and accumulation of knowledge. Block, Barnett, and Salerno have criticized Hoppe in their RAE article “The relationship between wealth orincome and time preference is empirical, not apodictic.” To say the least, I am skeptical of time-preference theory and, among those in the Austrian School, have views more like those of Jörg Guido Hülsmann.

Hoppe continues by distinguishing criminal from legitimized violence. Regarding crime, he makes the following observation:

The impact of crime is twofold. On the one hand, criminal activity reduces the supply of the goods of the victimized appropriator-producer~exchanger, thereby raising his effective time-preference rate (his time preference schedule being given). On the other hand, insofar as individuals perceive a risk of future victimization they will accordingly reallocate their resources. They will build walls and fences, install locks and alarm systems, design or buy weapons, and purchase protection and insurance services. The existence of crime thus implies a setback in the process toward a fall in the rate of time preference as far its actual victims are concerned, and it leads to expenditures-by actual and potential victims-which would be considered wasteful without the existence of crime.
            Therefore, crime or a change in its rate has the same type of effect on time preference as the occurrence or a changed frequency of "natural" disasters.

Regarding legitimized violence, he says

Because of their legitimacy, … government violations of property rights affect individual time preferences systematically differently and much more profoundly than does crime. Like crime, government interference with private-property rights reduces someone's supply of present goods and thus raises his effective time-preference rate. Yet government offenses-unlike crime-simultaneously raise the time-preference degree of actual and potential victims because they also imply a reduction in the supply of future goods (a reduced rate of return on investment).

To enter a full discussion of where Hoppe and Pinker disagree would take a long while, let alone where I may disagree with both authors. I should say that I think increased wealth may directly contribute to reducing crime, both for reasons described by Hoppe (investing in defensive goods and services) and for reasons of providing better incentives to use “economic means” to acquire additional wealth. Regardless, it is important to understand the internalization of nonviolent behavior, how it contributes to the extent and intensity of social cooperation, and how it ultimately contributes to better social outcomes. On that note, one may wish to read further - see especially the paper by Stringham on economic freedom and homicide.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Smithian Themes in The Better Angels


I am subscribed to Reason Foundation's "Reason Alert," from which I sometimes find articles of interest. For instance, yesterday I followed a link to an interview with neuroscientist - really linguist - Steven Pinker. The interview concerns his recent book, The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined. Certainly the topic is interesting to me, though I don't expect to have the time to read the book. The text interview ends with the following:

reason: The book is called The Better Angels of Our Nature. What are the better angels of our nature?

Pinker: I identify four of them. One of them is self-control: the ability to anticipate the consequences of your behavior and to inhibit it as a result. That is, someone insults you, you count to 10 and you walk away instead of knifing them. Empathy: the ability to feel others’ pain, so that you no longer have fun when you watch someone disemboweled, but you’re actually sickened by the thought of it. Morality: admittedly, that’s a very multiple-personality angel, because a lot of morality actually leads to violence rather than preventing it. But at least a morality concentrating on fairness and universal rules is one of our better angels. And reason, the ability to deploy our cognitive faculties to figure out the best way of living our lives. 

This brought to my mind a passage from Adam Smith's Theory of Moral Sentiments:

In the command of those appetites of the body consists that virtue which is properly called temperance. To restrain them within those bounds, which regard to health and fortune prescribes, is the part of prudence. But to confine them within those limits, which grace, which propriety, which delicacy, and modesty, require, is the office of temperance.

Let us relate this to Pinker's words. To restrain and confine within these bounds and limits, as well as to identity these bounds and limits, is to employ self-control. Those limits of grace, propriety, and delicacy regarded by temperance are based on empathy - more generally, in Smith's treatment, on sympathy. To determine those bounds prescribed by regard to health and fortune, among other things, is to employ reason. Arguably, Smith's book can be said to show how "a morality concentrating on fairness and universal rules" can emerge from our natural sentiments. It may be an interesting project to see how much of the work of Pinker and others was anticipated by Smith.

I hope to discuss further matters related to the Pinker interview in future posts.