Episode 03: "FREE TO CHOOSE"
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When we finished last time,
we were looking at John Stuart Mill's
attempt to reply
to the critics
of Bentham's utilitarianism.
In his book Utilitarianism,
Mill tries to show
that critics to the contrary, it is possible
within the utilitarian framework to distinguish between higher and lower
pleasures. It is possible to make qualitative distinctions of worth
and we tested that idea
with the Simpsons
and the Shakespeare excerpts.
And the results of our experiment
seem to call into question
Mill's distinction
because a great many of you
reported
that you prefer the Simpsons
but that you still consider Shakespeare
to be the higher or the worthier pleasure.
That's the dilemma
with which our experiment confronts
Mill.
What about Mill's attempt to account
for the specially weighty character
of individual rights and justice in chapter five of Utilitarianism?
He wants to say that individual rights
are worthy
of special respect.
In fact, he goes so far as to say that justice is the most sacred part
and the most incomparably binding part of morality.
But the same challenge
could be put
to this part of Mill's defense.
Why is justice
the chief part
and the most binding part of all morality? Well, he says because in the long run
if we do justice and if we respect rights
society as a whole
will be better off in the long run.
Well, what about that?
What if we have a case where making an exception and violating individual rights actually
will make people
better off in the long run? Is it all right then
to use people?
And there's a further
objection
that could be raised against
Mill's case for justice and rights.
Suppose the utilitarian calculus in the long run works out as he says it will
such that respecting people's rights
is a way of making everybody better off
in the long run.
Is that the right reason?
Is that the only reason
to respect people?
If the doctor goes in and yanks the organs from the healthy patient who came in for a checkup
to save five lives
there would be adverse effects in the long run.
Eventually people would learn about this
and would stop going in for checkups.
Is it the right reason?
Is the only reason
that you as the doctor
won't yank the organs out of the healthy patient
that you think
well if I use
him in this way
in the long run
more lives will be lost?
Or is there another reason?
Having to do with intrinsic respect for the person as an individual.
And if that reason matters
then it's not so clear
that even Mill's utilitarianism
can take account of it.
Fully to examine these two
worries or objections
to Mill's defense
we need to push further.
We need to ask
in the case of higher or worthier pleasures
are there theories of the good life
that can provide independent moral standards
for the worth of pleasures?
If so what do they look like?
That's one question.
In the case of justice and rights
if we suspect that Mill is implicitly leaning on notions of human dignity or respect for
a person that are not strictly speaking
utilitarian
we need to look to see whether there are some stronger theories of rights
that can explain
the intuition
which even Mill shares
the intuition
that the reason for respecting individuals and not using them
goes beyond
even utility in the long run.
Today we turn
to one
of those strong theories of rights.
Strong theories of rights say
individuals matter
not just as instruments to be used for a larger social purpose
or for the sake of maximizing utility.
Individuals
are separate beings with separate lives
worthy of respect.
And so it's a mistake
according to strong theories of rights, it's a mistake
to think about justice or law
by just adding up preferences
and values.
The strong rights theory we turn to today
is libertarianism.
Libertarianism
takes individual rights seriously.
It's called libertarianism because it says the fundamental individual right
is the right to liberty.
Precisely because we are separate individual beings
we're not available
to any use
that the society might
desire or devise. Precisely because we are individual
separate human beings
we have a fundamental right to liberty
and that means
a right to choose freely,
to live our lives as we please
provided we respect other people's rights
to do the same.
That's the fundamental idea.
Robert Nozick,
one of the libertarian philosophers we read
for this course, puts it this way.
Individuals have rights
so strong and far-reaching are these rights
that they raise the question of what, if anything,
the state may do.
So what does libertarianism say
about
the role of government
or of the state?
Well there are three things that most
modern states do
that on the libertarian theory of rights
are illegitimate,
are unjust.
One of them
is paternalist legislation.
That's passing laws that protect people from themselves.
Seat belt laws for example,
or motorcycle helmet laws.
The libertarian says
it may be a good thing if people wear seat belts
but that should be up to them
and the state,
the government,
has no business coercing them,
to wear seat belts
by law.
It's coercion.
So no paternalist legislation
number one. Number two,
no morals legislation.
Many laws
try to promote
the virtue of citizens
or try to give expression
to the moral
values
of the society as a whole.
Libertarians say
that's also
a violation of the right to liberty.
Take the example of,
well a classic example of legislation offered in the name of promoting morality,
traditionally
have been laws that prevent
sexual intimacy
between
gays and lesbians.
The libertarian says
nobody else is harmed,
nobody else's rights are violated,
so
the state should get out of the business entirely
of trying to promote virtue
or to enact morals legislation.
And the third kind of law
or policy
that is ruled out
on the libertarian philosophy
is any taxation
or other policy
that serves the purpose
of redistributing income or wealth
from the rich to the poor.
Redistribution
is a kind, if you think about it,
says the libertarian, is a kind of coercion.
What it amounts to
is theft
by the state
or by the majority,
if we're talking about a democracy,
from people who happen to do very well and earn a lot of money.
Now, Nozick and other libertarians allow that there can be a minimal state
that taxes people for the sake of
what everybody needs,
the national defense,
police force,
judicial system to enforce
contracts and
property rights,
but that's it.
Now,
I want to get your reactions
to this third
feature
of the libertarian view. I want to see
who among you
agree with that idea and who disagree
and why.
But just to make it concrete and to see what's at stake,
consider the distribution of wealth
in the United States.
The United States is among the most
inegalitarian societies as far as the distribution of wealth
of all the advanced democracies.
Now, is this just
or unjust?
Well, what does the libertarian say?
The libertarian says
you can't know just from the facts
I've just given you.
You can't know whether that distribution
is just or unjust.
You can't know just by looking at a pattern or a distribution or a result
whether it's just or unjust.
You have to know how it came to be.
You can't just look at the end state or the result.
You have to look at two principles.
The first he calls justice in acquisition
or in initial holdings.
And what that means simply is
did people get the things they use to make their money fairly?
So we need to know
was there justice in the initial holdings? Did they steal the land or the factory or the goods
that enabled them to make all that money?
If not,
if they were entitled to whatever it was that enabled them to
gather the wealth,
the first principle is met.
The second principle is
did the distribution arise
from the operation of free consent?
People buying and trading on the market.
As you can see the libertarian idea of justice
corresponds to a free market
conception of justice.
Provided people
got what they used
fairly,
didn't steal it,
and provided
the distribution results from the free choice of individuals buying and selling things,
the distribution is just.
And if not,
it's unjust.
So let's in order to fix ideas for this discussion
take
an actual
example.
Who's the wealthiest person
in the United States? Wealthiest person in the world?
Bill Gates.
It is.
That's right.
Here he is.
You'd be happy too.
Now, what's his net worth?
Anybody have any idea?
That's a big number.
During the Clinton years, remember there was a controversy, donors, big campaign contributors
were invited to stay overnight in the Lincoln bedroom at the White House?
I think if you contributed $25,000 or above,
someone figured out
at the median contribution
that got you invited to stay a night in the Lincoln bedroom,
Bill Gates could afford to stay in the Lincoln bedroom every night for the next 66,000 years.
Somebody else figured out
how much does he get paid on an hourly basis?
And
so they figured out since he began Microsoft
suppose he worked
what, 14 hours
per day?
Reasonable guess.
And you calculate
this net wealth.
It turns out
that his rate of
pay
is
over
$150, not
per hour,
not per minute,
$150, more than $150 per second,
which means
which means
that if on his way to the office
Gates noticed a hundred dollar bill on the street,
it wouldn't be worth his time to stop and pick it up.
Now, most of you will say
someone that wealthy
surely we can tax them
to meet
the pressing needs
of people
who lack an education
or lack enough to eat
or lack decent housing.
They need it more than he does.
And if you were a utilitarian
what would you do?
What tax policy would you have?
You'd redistribute in a flash, wouldn't you?
Because you would know
being a good utilitarian
that taking some
a small amount
he's scarcely going to notice it
but it will make a huge improvement in the lives
and in the welfare of those at the bottom.
But remember
the libertarian theory says
we can't just add up
and aggregate
preferences and satisfactions
that way
we have to respect
persons
and if he earned that money fairly
without violating anybody else's rights
in accordance with the two principles of justice in acquisition and justice in transfer,
then
it would be wrong
it would be a form of coercion
to take it away.
Michael Jordan is not as wealthy as Bill Gates
but he did pretty well for himself.
You want to see Michael Jordan?
There he is.
His income alone
in one year was thirty one million dollars
and then he made another forty seven million dollars in endorsements for Nike and other
companies.
So his income
was
in one year seventy eight million
to require him to pay
let's say a third of his earnings
to the government
to support good causes
like food and health care and housing and education for the poor
that's coercion
that's unjust
that violates his
rights
and that's why
redistribution is wrong.
Now, how many agree with that argument?
agree with the libertarian argument
that redistribution for the sake of
trying to help the poor is wrong?
and how many disagree with that argument?
All right, let's begin with those who disagree.
What's wrong with the libertarian case against
redistribution?
Yes.
I think these people like Michael Jordan have received
we're talking about working within a society
and they received a larger
gift from the society
and they have a larger obligation in return
to give that through redistribution.
You know, you can say that Michael Jordan may work just as hard as someone who works
you know
doing laundry twelve hours fourteen hours a day
but he's receiving more
I don't think it's fair to say that you know
it's all on his you know inherent
you know hard work.
Let's hear from defenders of libertarianism.
Why would it be wrong in principle
to tax the rich to help the poor?
My name's Joe and I collect skateboards.
I've since bought a hundred skateboards. I live in a society of a hundred people.
I'm the only one with skateboards. Suddenly everyone decides they want a skateboard.
They come into my house, they take my
they take ninety nine of my skateboards.
I think that is unjust.
Now I think in certain circumstances
it becomes necessary to overlook that injustice, perhaps condone that
injustice
as in the case of the cabin boy being killed
for food. If people are on the verge of dying, perhaps
it is necessary
to overlook that injustice but I think it's important to keep in mind
that we're still committing injustice
by taking people's belongings or assets. Are you saying that taxing Michael Jordan, say at a
thirty three percent tax rate
for good causes
to feed the hungry
is theft?
I think it's unjust. Yes I do believe it's theft but perhaps it is necessary
to condone that theft.
But it's theft.
Yes.
Why is it theft, Joe?
Because... Why is it like your collection of skateboards?
It's theft because
at least in my opinion and by the libertarian opinion
he earned that money fairly
and
it belongs to him so to take it from him is by definition theft.
Alright let's see if there's a...
Who wants to reply to Joe?
Yes, go ahead.
I don't think this is necessarily a case in which you have ninety nine skateboards
and
the government... or you have a hundred skateboards and the government's taking ninety nine of them.
It's like you have more skateboards than there are
days in a year. You have more skateboards than you're going to be able to use in your entire
lifetime
and the government is taking
part of those.
And I think that if you're operating in a society
in which the government's...
in which the government doesn't redistribute wealth
that that allows for people to amass so much wealth
that people who haven't started from
this very... the equal footing in our hypothetical situation
that doesn't exist in our real society
get undercut for the rest of their lives.
So you're worried that if there isn't some degree of redistribution, if some are left
at the bottom
there will be no genuine equality of opportunity.
The idea that taxation is theft
Nozick takes that point one step further.
He agrees that it's theft.
He's more demanding than Joe. Joe says it is theft
maybe in an extreme case it's justified
maybe
a parent
is justified in stealing a loaf of bread
to feed his or her hungry family.
So Joe is a... what would you call yourself? A compassionate quasi-libertarian?
Nozick says
if you think about it
taxation
amounts to the taking of earnings.
In other words it means
taking
the fruits
of my labor.
But if the state has the right
to take my earnings or the fruits of my labor
isn't that morally the same
as according to the state
the right
to claim
a portion of my labor?
So taxation actually
is morally equivalent
to forced labor
because forced labor
involves the taking
of my leisure, my time, my efforts
just as taxation
takes the earnings
that I make
with my labor.
And so for Nozick
and for the libertarians
taxation for redistribution
is theft as Joe says
but not only theft
it's morally equivalent
to laying claim
to certain hours
of a person's life
and labor.
So it's morally equivalent to forced labor.
If the state has a right to claim the fruits of my labor
that implies that it really
has an entitlement
to my labor itself.
And what is forced labor?
Forced labor
Nozick points out
is what?
Is slavery.
Because if I don't have the right, the sole right
to my own labor,
then
that's really to say that the government or the
political community
is a part owner in me.
And what does it mean for the state to be a part owner in me?
If you think about it,
it means
that I'm a slave,
that I don't own myself.
So what this line of reasoning brings us to
is the fundamental
principle
that underlies the libertarian case for rights.
What is that principle?
It's the idea
that I own myself.
It's the idea
of self-possession.
If you want to take rights seriously,
if you don't want to just regard people as collections of preferences,
the fundamental moral idea
to which you will be led
is the idea
that we are the owners or the proprietors of our own person.
And that's why
utilitarianism goes wrong.
And that's why it's wrong to yank the organs from that healthy patient.
You're acting as if
that patient belongs to you or to the community,
but we belong to ourselves.
And that's the same reason
that it's wrong to make laws to protect us from ourselves
or to tell us how to live,
to tell us what virtues
we should be governed by.
And that's also why it's wrong
to tax
the rich, to help the poor,
even for good causes,
even to help those who are displaced by the hurricane Katrina.
Ask them to give charity,
but if you tax them,
it's like forcing them to labor.
Could you
tell Michael Jordan he has to skip the next
week's games and go down to help
the people
displaced by hurricane Katrina?
Morally it's the same.
So the stakes are very high.
So far we've heard some objections
to the libertarian argument,
but if you want to reject it,
you have to break into this chain of reasoning which goes,
taking my earnings
is like
taking my labor,
but taking my labor
is making me a slave.
And if you disagree with that,
you must believe in the principle of self-possession.
Those who
disagree,
gather your objections
and we'll begin with them next time.
Anyone like to take up that point?
I feel like when you live in a society you give up that right. I mean technically if I
want to personally go out and kill someone because they offend me, that is self-possession.
Because I live in a society I cannot do that.
Victoria, are you questioning
the fundamental premise of self-possession?
Yes.
I think that you don't really have self-possession if you choose to live in a society because
you cannot just discount
the people around you.
We were talking last time about libertarianism.
I want to go back to the arguments for and against the redistribution of income,
but before we do that,
just one word about
the minimal state.
Martin Friedman,
the libertarian economist,
he points out
that many of the functions
that we take for granted
as properly belonging to government, don't.
They are paternalist. One example he gives is social security.
He says it's a good idea
for people to save for their retirement
during their earning years,
but it's wrong.
It's a violation of people's liberty
for the government to force
everyone,
whether they want to or not,
to put aside some
earnings today
for the sake of their retirement. If people want to take the chance,
or people want to live big today and live
a poor
retirement,
that should be their choice.
They should be free
to make those judgments and take those risks.
So even social security
would still be at odds with the minimal state
that Milton Friedman
argued for.
It's sometimes thought that
collective goods like police protection
and fire protection
will inevitably create the problem of free riders unless they're publicly provided.
But there are ways
to
prevent free riders. There are ways to
restrict even seemingly collective goods like fire protection.
I read an article
a while back about a private fire company, the Salem Fire Corporation in Arkansas.
You can sign up with the Salem Fire Corporation,
pay a yearly subscription fee,
and if your house catches on fire,
they will come and put out the fire.
But they won't put out
everybody's fire.
They will only put it out
if it's a fire
in the home of a
subscriber or if it starts to spread
and to threaten
the home of a subscriber.
The newspaper article
told the story of a homeowner who had subscribed
to this company in the past
but failed to renew his subscription. His house caught on fire.
The Salem Fire Corporation showed up with its trucks
and watched the house burn,
just making sure that it didn't spread.
The fire chief was asked,
well he wasn't exactly the fire chief, I guess he was the CEO.
He was asked,
how can you stand by with fire equipment
and allow a person's home to burn?
He replied,
once we verified there was no danger to a member's property,
we had no choice
but to back off
according to our rules. If we responded to all fires, he said, there would be no incentive to subscribe.
The homeowner, in this case,
tried to renew his subscription at the scene of the fire,
but the head of the company refused.
You can't wreck your car, he said, and then buy insurance for it later.
So, even public goods
that we take for granted as being within the proper province of government,
can, many of them, in principle,
be
isolated, made exclusive to those who pay.
That's all to do with
the question of collective goods
and the libertarians' injunction against
paternalism.
But let's go back now to the
arguments about redistribution.
Now,
underlying
the libertarians' case
for the minimal state
is a worry about coercion. But what's wrong with coercion?
The libertarian offers this answer.
To coerce someone,
to use some person for the sake of the general welfare
is wrong
because it calls into question the fundamental fact
that we own ourselves.
The fundamental moral fact
of self-possession or self-ownership.
The libertarians' argument against redistribution
begins with this fundamental idea that we own ourselves.
Nozick says
that if
the society as a whole
can go to Bill Gates
or go to Michael Jordan
and tax away a portion
of their wealth,
what the society is really asserting
is a collective property right
in Bill Gates
or in Michael Jordan.
But that violates
the fundamental principle
that we belong to ourselves.
Now, we've already heard a number of objections
to the libertarian argument.
What I would like to do today
is to give
the libertarians among us
a chance to answer the objections
that have been raised.
And some have been, some
have already identified themselves and have agreed to
come and make the case
for libertarianism to reply to the objections that have been raised.
So raise your hand if you are among the libertarians
who's prepared to stand up
for the theory and respond to the objections.
You are
Alex Harris who's been a
star on the web blog.
All right, Alex, come here, stand up, come.
We'll create a libertarian corner over here.
Who else? Other libertarians
who will join?
What's your name?
John Sheffield.
Who else wants to join?
Other brave libertarians who are prepared
to take on, yes,
what's your name?
Julia Roto, Julia, come.
Join us over there.
Now while the,
while Team Libertarian,
Julia, John, Alex,
while Team Libertarian is gathering over there,
let me just summarize
the main objections that I've heard
in class and on the website.
Objection number one,
and here, I'll come down to, I want to talk to Team Libertarian over here.
So objection number one
is that
the poor need the money more.
That's an obvious objection.
A lot more
than
do
Bill Gates and Michael Jordan.
Objection number two,
it's not really slavery to tax
because
at least in a democratic society
it's not a slave holder.
It's Congress.
It's a democratic, you're smiling Alex already, you're confident you can reply to all of these?
So taxation by consent of the governed is not coerced.
Third, some people have said don't the successful
like Gates
owe a debt to society for their success that they repay by paying taxes.
Who wants to respond to the first one? The poor need the money more.
John.
John, what's the answer?
The poor need the money more.
That's quite obvious.
I could use the money. I certainly wouldn't mind if Bill Gates gave me a million dollars.
I'd take a thousand.
But at some point
you have to understand that the benefits of redistribution of wealth don't justify the
financial violation of the property right.
If you look at the argument the poor need the money more, at no point in that argument
do you contradict the fact that we've extrapolated from agreed upon principles that people own
themselves.
We've extrapolated that people have property rights.
And so whether or not it would be a good thing or a nice thing or even a necessary thing
for the survival of some people,
we don't see that that justifies the violation of the right that we've logically extrapolated.
And so that also, I mean
there still exists this institution of
like individual philanthropy. Milton Friedman makes this argument.
So Bill Gates can give to charity if he wants to.
But it would still be wrong to coerce him
to meet the needs of the poor.
Are the two of you happy with that reply?
Anything to add?
Go ahead, Julie.
I think, Julia, yes. I think I could also add,
I guess I could add that
there's a difference between needing something and deserving something. I mean in an ideal society
everyone's needs be met,
but here we're arguing what do we deserve as a society.
And the poor don't deserve
don't deserve
the benefits that would flow from taxing Michael Jordan to help them.
Based on what we've come up with here I don't think
you deserve something like that.
Let me push you a little bit on that, Julia.
The victims of Hurricane Katrina
are in desperate need of help.
Would you say that they don't deserve
help that would come
from
the federal government through taxation?
Okay, that's a difficult question.
I think
this is a case where they need help, not
deserve it.
I think again if you hit a certain level of
requirements to reach sustenance, you're going to need help. Like if you don't have
food or a place to live, that's a case of need.
## So need is one thing and dessert is another.
Who would like to reply?
Going back to the first point
that he made about the property rights of the individual,
the property rights are established and enforced by the government, which is
a democratic government and we have representatives
who enforce those rights.
If you live in a society that operates under those rules,
then it should be up to the government
to decide
how
those resources that come out through taxation are distributed because
it is through the consent of the government. If you disagree with it,
you don't have to live in that society where that operates.
All right, good. And tell me your name.
Raul is pointing out, actually Raul is invoking
point number two.
If the taxation is by
the consent of the governed,
it's not coerced,
it's legitimate.
Bill Gates and Michael Jordan are citizens of the United States. They get to vote for
Congress. They get to
vote
their policy convictions
just like everybody else.
Who would like to take that one on? John?
Basically what the libertarians are
objecting to in this case is the middle 80% deciding what the top 10%
are doing for the bottom 10%. Wait, wait, wait, wait, John.
Majority. Don't you believe in democracy?
Well, right, but at some point... Don't you believe in, I mean you say 80%, 10% majority.
Majority rule is what?
The majority.
Exactly, but... In a democracy. Aren't you for democracy? Yes, I'm for democracy, but...
Hang on, hang on, hang on.
Democracy and mob rule aren't the same thing. Mob rule? Mob rule.
Exactly. But in an open society you have a recourse to address that through your
representatives.
And if the majority of the consent of those who are governed
doesn't agree with you,
then you know
you're choosing to live in a society
and you have to operate under what
the majority of society concludes. Alright, Alex on democracy.
Democracy, what about that?
The fact that
I have won, you know, 500 thousandth of a vote for one representative in Congress
is not the same thing as my
having the ability to decide for myself
how to use my property rights. I'm
a drop in the bucket.
And, you know, well... You might lose the vote.
Exactly. And they might take... And I will. I mean I don't have
the decision right now of whether or not to pay taxes. If I don't I get locked in jail.
Or they tell me to get out of the country. But Alex, Alex,
let me make a small case for democracy.
See what you would say.
Why can't you... We live in a democratic society with freedom of speech.
Why can't you take to the hustings,
persuade your fellow citizens
that taxation is unjust
and try to get a majority?
I don't think the people should be... should have to convince 280 million others
simply in order to exercise
their own rights in order to not have their self-ownership violated.
I think people should be able to do that without having to convince
280 million people. Does that mean you're against democracy as a whole? No, I just believe
in a very limited form of democracy whereby we have a constitution that severely limits
the scope of what decisions
can be made democratically.
All right. So you're saying that democracy is fine
except where fundamental rights are involved.
I think you could win... If you're going on the hustings, let me add one element to the
argument you might make.
Maybe you could say, put aside the economic debates,
taxation.
Suppose the individual right to religious liberty were at stake.
Then, Alex, you could say on the hustings,
surely you would all agree
that we shouldn't put the right to individual liberty up to a vote?
Yeah, that's exactly right.
And that's why we have constitutional amendments and why we make it so hard to amend our constitution.
So you would say
that the right to private property,
the right of Michael Jordan to keep all the money he makes, at least
to protect it from redistribution,
is the same kind of right
with the same kind of weight
as the right to freedom of speech,
the right to religious liberty, rights that should trump
what the majority wants?
Exactly. The reason why we have a right to free speech is because we have a right
to own ourselves, to exercise our voice
in any way that we choose.
So there we... Alright, who would like to respond to that argument about
democracy being... Okay, up there. Stand up.
I think comparing religion and economics, it's not the same thing.
The reason why Bill Gates was able to make so much money is because we live in an economically
and socially stable
society, and if the government didn't provide for the poorest ten percent, as you say,
through taxation, then
we would need more money for police to prevent crime.
And so either way, there would be more taxes taken away to provide what you guys call
the necessary things
that the government provides.
What's your name?
Anna. Anna, let me ask you this.
Why
is the fundamental right to religious liberty
from
the right Alex asserts
as a fundamental right
to private property
and to keep what I earn?
What's the difference between the two?
Because you wouldn't
have...
You wouldn't be able to make money. You wouldn't be able to own property if
there wasn't a socially... Like, if society wasn't stable.
And that's completely different from religion. That's like something personal,
something that you can practice on your own in your own home.
Whereas, like, me practicing my religion is not going to affect the next person.
But if I'm poor and I'm desperate,
like, I might commit a crime to feed my family,
and that can affect others. Okay, good. Thank you.
Would it be wrong for someone
to steal a loaf of bread
to feed
his starving family?
Is that wrong?
I believe that it is. This is... Let's take a quick poll of the three of you.
You say yes, it is wrong.
It violates property rights. It's wrong.
Even to save a starving family?
I mean, there are definitely other ways around that, and
by justifying...
No, hang on, hang on. Before you laugh at me.
That didn't work.
Before...
Before justifying the act
of stealing,
you have to look at
violating the right that we've already agreed exists, the right of self-possession
and the possession of,
I mean, your own things. We agree on property rights. We agree on stealing.
So property rights is not the issue.
So why is it wrong to steal even to feed your starving family? Sort of the original
argument that I made in the very first question you asked. The benefits
of an action don't justify, don't
make the action just.
What would you say, Julia?
Is it all right to
steal a loaf of bread to feed a starving family, or to steal a drug that
your child needs to
survive?
I think I'm okay with that, honestly. Even from a libertarian standpoint, I think that
okay saying that you can just take money arbitrarily from people who have a lot
to go to this pool of people who need it,
but you have an individual who's acting on their own behalf
to kind of save themselves. I mean, I think you said they,
from the idea of self-possession,
they're also in charge of
protecting themselves and keeping themselves alive.
So therefore, even from a libertarian standpoint, that might be okay.
Alright, that's good. That's good.
What about number three up here?
Isn't it the case
that the successful, the wealthy
owe a debt? They didn't do that all by themselves. They had to cooperate with other people.
That they
owe a debt to society, and that that's expressed in taxation. You want to take that on, Julia?
Okay, this one, I believe that
there is not a debt to society in the sense that how did these people become wealthy? They did something
that society valued highly.
I think that society has already
been providing for them.
If anything, I think everything's canceled out. They provided a service to society
and society
responded by, somehow they got their wealth.
So be concrete. In the case of Michael Jordan,
some,
I mean to illustrate your point,
there were people who helped you make the money, the teammates,
the coach,
people who taught him how to play.
But you're saying that they've all been paid for their services.
Exactly.
And society derived a lot of benefit and pleasure from watching Michael Jordan play.
I think that that's how he paid his debt to society.
Alright, good. Who would anyone like to take up that point?
I think that there's a problem here
that we're assuming that a person has self-possession when they live in a society.
I feel like when you live in a society you give up that right. I mean technically if I
want to personally go out and kill someone because they offend me, that is self-possession.
Because I live in a society I cannot do that.
I think it's kind of equivalent to say because I have more money, I have resources that can
save people's lives.
Is it not okay for the government to take that from me?
It's self-possession only to a certain extent because I'm living in a society where I have
to take account of the people around me.
So are you questioning, what's your name?
Victoria, are you questioning
the fundamental premise of self-possession?
I think that you don't really have self-possession if you choose to live in a society because
you cannot just discount the people around you.
Alright, I want to quickly get the response
of
the libertarian team
to the last point.
The last point
builds on
well maybe it builds on Victoria's suggestion that we don't own ourselves
because it says
that Bill Gates is wealthy,
that Michael Jordan makes a huge income.
Isn't wholly
their own doing?
It's the product of a lot of luck
and so we can't claim that they
morally deserve
all the money they make.
Who wants to reply to that?
You certainly could make the case that
it is not, their wealth is not appropriate to the goodness in their hearts,
but that's not really the morally relevant issue. The point is that
they have received what they have through the free exchange of people who have given them
their holdings, usually in exchange for providing some other service.
Good enough.
I want to try to sum up what we've learned from this discussion but first let's thank
John, Alex, and Julia for an excellent, really wonderful job.
Thank you.
Toward the end of the discussion just now
Victoria challenged
the premise of this line of reasoning, this libertarian logic.
Maybe, she suggested, we don't own ourselves
after all.
If you reject
the libertarian case against redistribution
there would seem to be
an incentive
to break into the libertarian line of reasoning
at the earliest, at the most modest level,
which is why a lot of people
disputed
that taxation
is morally equivalent to forced labor.
But what about
the big claim,
the premise, the big idea underlying the libertarian argument?
Is it true that we own ourselves?
Or
can we do without that idea
and still avoid
what libertarians want to avoid,
creating a society and an account of justice
where some people
can be
just used
for the sake
of other people's welfare
or even for the sake
of the general good?
Libertarians combat
the utilitarian idea
of using people
as means
for the collective happiness
by saying the way to put a stop to that utilitarian logic of using persons
is to resort to the intuitively powerful idea
that we are the proprietors of our own person.
That's Alex and Julia and John
and Robert Nozick.
What are the consequences
for a theory of justice
and an account of rights
of calling into question
the idea of self-possession?
Does it mean that we're back to utilitarianism
and using people
and aggregating preferences
and pushing the fat man off the bridge?
Nozick doesn't
himself
fully develop the idea of self-possession. He borrows it from an earlier philosopher, John Locke.
John Locke
accounted
for the rise of private property
from the state of nature
by a chain of reasoning very similar to the one that Nozick and the libertarians use.
John Locke said
private property arises
because
when we mix our labor
with things,
unowned things,
we come to acquire a property right in those things.
And the reason,
the reason is that we own our own labor.
And the reason for that,
we are the proprietors, the owners
of our own person.
And so in order to examine
the moral force of the libertarian claim that we own ourselves,
we need to turn
to the English political philosopher John Locke
and examine his account
of private property
and self-ownership.
And that's what we'll do next time.
Thank you.
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