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- From: jmorriso@ee.ubc.ca (John Paul Morrison)
- Subject: The Errors of Socialism
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.010015.8889@ee.ubc.ca>
- Organization: University of BC, Electrical Engineering
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1993 01:00:15 GMT
- Lines: 159
-
- Here is an interesting article. Maybe it'll make people think, even just
- a little. Perhaps we can discuss how it relates to Canadian Socialists
- (NDP, etc)
-
-
- THE FATAL CONCEIT: THE ERRORS OF SOCIALISM
- by F. A. Hayek
- The University of Chicago Press, 5801 South Ellis Avenue,
- Chicago, IL 60637 1989 180 pages $24.95 cloth
- Reviewed by Robert Taylor
-
- At the ripe old age of 90, Nobel Laureate Friedrich von
- Hayek has loosed one final curve ball at the academic world.
- While intended as a capstone work to summarize his lifelong
- contributions to the social sciences, this book takes a
- somewhat novel tack by examining the origin and nature of
- ethics.
-
- Like Marx, Hayek sees an inherent contradiction in
- Western capitalistic societies. Unlike Marx, however, Hayek
- sees this contradiction in terms of an ethical dualism, not a
- materialistic dialectic, and he also feels that this
- contradiction is both necessary and beneficial -- though
- nonetheless problematic.
-
- Hayek approaches ethics from an entirely different angle
- from most philosophers. While philosophical ethics usually
- entail rationalistic system-building from certain assumptions
- about human nature or from bits of empirical data, Hayek's
- ethics are non-rationalistic and based upon the historical
- process. Hayek rejects the explicit, rationalistic
- construction of most ethical systems because such
- constructions rest upon the "fatal conceit" of human reason.
- Reason, Hayek argues, is incapable of commanding the
- information necessary to design an ethical system.
-
- Hayek believes that ethics lie somewhere between instinct
- and reason. Ethics -- like language, the marketplace, and the
- common law -- are a spontaneous order that, in the words of
- Adam Ferguson, is the product of "human action, but not human
- design."
-
- Our ethical system was not designed by anyone; it is
- traditional, handed down from generation to generation, and
- learned by imitation. Its progress and development were
- achieved by a process of social evolution: those cultures
- which adopted "good" ethical systems survived and flourished,
- while those with "bad" ones either floundered or adopted more
- successful ethical systems. This subtle process of trial-and-
- error has produced Western ethics, a highly successful system.
-
- In what way do Western ethics contain a "contradiction"?
- To understand this proposition, one must examine Hayek's
- theory of the actual historical development of ethics. Hayek
- holds that the original human ethical system was that of the
- small group -- the hunter/gatherer tribe. These "small group"
- ethics were both solidaristic and altruistic. The primitive
- tribes at the dawn of human history were each united by a
- shared purpose -- rudimentary survival in an uncontrollable,
- hostile environment -- that superseded the different purposes
- of the tribes' individual members.
-
- As time passed, agricultural techniques were developed
- and cities were founded. These events provided a basis for
- two further developments that made "small group" ethics
- untenable: economic trade and population growth. Trade placed
- members of closed communities in constant contact with
- "foreigners" who usually did not share the group's purposes or
- beliefs. Population growth, spurred by relative economic
- security, made the small group rather large, with the result
- that members of the same group were often strangers to one
- another and often pursued different ends.
-
- These social changes were matched by changes in the
- ethical sphere. "Small group" ethics were not applicable to
- diverse, cosmopolitan communities; groups that failed to adapt
- became isolated and economically stagnant. Through the social
- evolutionary process, "small group" ethics were gradually
- replaced by what Hayek calls "extended order" ethics.
- "Extended order" ethics abandoned commands that sought
- collective ends in favor of abstract, generally applicable
- rules that facilitated varied individual ends. These ethics
- served as an impersonal mechanism for the coordination of
- individual actions and plans, whereas "small group" ethics
- were dependent upon the highly personal rule of the tribal
- leader, who directed the group to a common goal.
-
- While "extended order" ethics replaced "small group"
- ethics as the dominant system, "small group" ethics continued
- to exist side by side with their more successful counterparts.
- Families, friendships, and businesses continued to operate
- according to the solidaristic principles of "small group"
- ethics for obvious reasons. Love, camaraderie, and shared
- purpose -- so necessary to human fulfillment -- are possible
- only within the small group. Thus, contemporary Western
- ethics are a heterogeneous mixture: "extended order" ethics
- tell individuals and groups how to act within the larger
- social order, while "small group" ethics instruct individuals
- how to behave within the confines of the various voluntary
- organizations to which they belong.
-
- But, as Hayek notes, individuals have only a "limited
- ability to live simultaneously within two orders of rules."
- The dividing line between the two ethical structures often
- becomes fuzzy in application, leaving individuals confused
- concerning their obligations. For instance, one would clearly
- have an obligation to assist a friend or family member in
- financial need. But what about a needy stranger who accosts
- one on the street? Or a fellow businessman, teetering at the
- edge of bankruptcy, with whom one is competing in the
- marketplace of the extended order?
-
- Hayek warns that, as strong as the tension may be, the
- balance between the two systems of ethics must be maintained.
- Both systems serve vitally important functions within their
- own spheres: "small group" ethics provide for warmth and
- compassion essential to man as a social animal, while
- "extended order" ethics provide a coordination function
- necessary to maintain economic security and further growth in
- both population and wealth.
-
- While no one (with the possible exception of Ayn Rand's
- followers) is calling for an extension of "extended order"
- ethics into the realm of the small group, there is an
- influential intellectual group, the socialists, calling for
- just the opposite: the reconquest of the West by "small group"
- ethics. Needless to say, Hayek looks upon this prospect
- unfavorably. Hayek, while admitting that such an event might
- initially satisfy our instincts, points out its long-range
- consequences: poverty, starvation, and widespread death.
- "Extended order" ethics, Hayek notes, are chiefly responsible
- for making possible our present level of population and
- economic well-being; their abandonment would lead to chaos and
- primitive tribalism, a tribalism which, lacking large-scale
- coordinating capabilities, would be unable to sustain Earth's
- population.
-
- The ethical dualism Hayek sees in Western society is
- ultimately incapable of resolution. The socialist
- alternative, argues Hayek, is reactionary and inapplicable to
- the complex yet subtle extended order of the modern world.
- Hayek's final message in The Fatal Conceit is wise counsel
- that should be pondered by all: the maintenance of a classical
- liberal society, an extended order composed of individuals and
- voluntary organizations freely interacting, is, without
- exaggeration, a matter of life and death.
-
- ___________________________________________________________
- Robert Taylor is a junior studying political science and
- economics at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville. This
- review is adapted from a column in the campus newspaper, The
- Daily Beacon.
- --
- __________________________________________________________________________
- John Paul Morrison |
- University of British Columbia, Canada |
- Electrical Engineering | .sig file without a cause
- jmorriso@ee.ubc.ca VE7JPM |
- ________________________________________|_________________________________
-