This article is part of a series of articles on the subject of evolution, ethics and spirituality:

Parts: I, II, III, IV, V, VI (1), VI (2), VII, VIII (1), VIII (2), IX (1), IX (2), IX (3), X (1), X (2), X (3), XI (1), XI (2), XI (3), XII, XIII, XIV, XV, XVI, XVII (1), XVII (2), XVIII, XIX, XX

Evolution, Ethics, And Spirituality: Part XXI — The Stuff You Give Away without Losing (I)

(The entire analysis from here on is based on this proposal by the philosopher André Comte-Sponville with some modifications of mine)

Comte-Sponville's Stratified Model

Gossip!

Bah! I hate celebrities! Hmmm … let me correct that. I hate all the gossip about celebrities. I’m not interested in reality shows about celebrities either. Don’t people realize that when there is a camera around, the show is not "real" anymore?! I can care less about celebrities’ marital life, divorces, drinking habits, drug habits, religious habits, etc.

Let me correct that. Actually I am drawn to that kind of information, but I think that the situation in Afghanistan, Iraq, Egypt, Japan, and so on are more important than celebrities. I also believe that we should think more seriously about many economic and social issues. We can leave celebrities’ scandals aside. However, in commercial TV in general, the discussions about all of these subjects is retarded, mostly for people’s entertainment. That’s why I hated MySpace when it turned into Celebrity Gossip land. Who cares?! I wonder if people actually saw Lions and Lambs and thought deeply about its message.

Yet, one of the reasons (but not the main one) why TV networks are so darn successful in ratings is that they have studied the psychology of people who watch. And they know how to make people interested in the small things in life: about celebrities, fashion, baseball, and fishing. Not that at least baseball or fishing have no merit of their own, or are not worth watching or knowing, but we have to wonder about the news priorities in people’s minds. A great part of it is media manipulation, sometimes in ways we can’t even suspect. Hey … it’s a game!

Much of our "needs" are artificially created by these networks. It is, as Chomsky says, it is the philosophy of futility. Part of those artificial needs is …. knowing about celebrities … gossip!

But let’s confess it, we are suckers for this kind of gossip. Who wouldn’t want to know when is the next Youtube video Tom Cruise is going to appear doing or saying something crazy. Think about when Tom Cruise revealed on Oprah that he was going to marry Katie Holmes.

and aaaaaallll the fun after that!

Oh! Oh! And did you enjoy that famous Tom Cruise Scientology video? Everyone thought he was crazy for real! I really loved watching this …

… and all of the fun after that!

Oh! C’mon … you loved these videos! Didn’t you?! Yes, and I did too.

Yet, there is something wildly peculiar about this Tom Cruise-Scientology video which was not funny in the long run … at least for a lot of people. Issues about this particular video in Youtube would unleash something that would really … really cost a lot for Master Card, PayPal, Visa, Amazon.com, even PostFinance, a Swiss bank. Recently it has become a headache even to some homophobic fundamentalist hate-groups in the U.S. In fact, the consequences of this video is of international proportions.

Now … why the heck would a weird Tom Cruise-Scientology video have such huge consequences? Well … that’s part of the problem. The common ground for all of these events is simply Anonymous …

Cultural Problem-Solving Branching

Do you recognize this mask?

Mask of V for Vendetta

This is the famous mask of V for Vendetta, a great movie. Today, this mask also represents Anonymous. And by Anonymous, I don’t refer to an unknown author, but to a group, an organized group of unknowns on the net. Usually hackers who are engaged now in "hackivism". This is their flag:

Flag of Anonymous

The organization appeared in 2003 more or less as a form of entertainment, until they started focusing on some targets, practically for purposes of criticisms or social reasons. Yet, the Tom Cruise-Scientology video led Anonymous’ hackivism and activism to a whole new level.

This video upset the Church of Scientology, because it was never meant to be disseminated in Youtube, and they made a copyright claim on it. Youtube removed it from the Internet in January 2008, but in that same month, Anonymous sent a message through Youtube against the Church of Scientology because of Internet censorship. After that, they flooded the Church of Scientology with DDoS (denial-of-service) attacks, phone calls, faxes, and so on.

The Church immediately threatened them, and accused Anonymous of being a group of cyberterrorists and child molesters.

Note: Anonymous itself has nothing to do with child molestation. The problem is that the Church of Scientology tends to accuse its opponents of being child molesters. That’s their favorite accusation when they harass people.

After an appeal made by Mark Bunker, a movie producer and director, Anonymous dedicated itself to make peaceful protests against the Church of Scientology. This operation is called Project Chanology, which is a whole operation of protest and orientation on the web about the harms of that particular Church.

But why the mask? It is very well known that the Church of Scientology has practiced a policy of harassment against protesters. L. Ron Hubbard, the Church’s founder, established that people labeled by the Church as "suppressive person" were fair game. If you attack the Church of Scientology, and they declare you a suppressive person, be aware that it will literally engage in an intelligence operation and see who you are, where you live, they’ll sue you to bankruptcy (regardless of whether the accusations are true or not), and even go to your boss to tell him or her that you are a "child molester", or an "alcoholic", or an "adulterer", etc. Hence .. the mask! A very carefully chosen mask. The members of Anonymous hide from Scientologists who might harass them, and let them know that Anonymous is protesting, and what they stand for.

Yet, this whole new level of Anonymous activism drives that group to a whole new level of hackivism that even have corporations and governments extremely worried … far more worried than Wikileaks as a matter of fact. When Wikileaks was censored on the Internet by Amazon, Master Card, and other companies, Anonymous went on to hack their servers, and drive those companies and governments crazy.

This is just one illustration of what happens in culture. One single video can generate lots of fun, criticisms, activisms, hackivisms, you name it. Each solution formulated within our culture can generate several branches of a problem-solving process (in Popperian terms).

Cultural Evolution

As I have argued before, this resembles Darwin’s description of speciation, but in other ways it is not a Darwinian version of evolution. I already mentioned in one post that culture is mostly (although not completely) Lamarckian, but there are other differences between evolution by natural selection and culture.

Darwinian evolution occurs because of lack of resources, if there were no scarcity of available energy in nature, there wouldn’t be any "struggle for existence". There is in principle scarcity of resources a species can thrive with. Species compete for those resources and adapt accordingly. Yet, culture is different. Cultural objects have a peculiarity due to our inherent drive to know stuff. We are driven to gossip, because the information gives us an adaptive advantage in case it is true. Each gossip is delicious, and we enjoy it when we hear it. The media knows all of this very well. Youtube thrives on it. Our pseudo-need to know about the latest gossip about celebrities happens to be a result of an adaptation … of a Darwinian sort. Yet, the way culture spreads and operates is different from Darwinian processes.

What is "knowing" (in an informal sense of the word)? To "know" is essentially to grasp information with our minds. That’s all cool, until you realize what is particularly different than species competing for scarce resources …

Giving Away your Cake, and Keeping It! (To Eat It … of Course)

If you don’t understand what information has to do with scarcity (or lack of it), let me quote you Thomas Jefferson (in a letter to Isaac McPherson in 1813):

If nature has made any one thing less susceptible than all others of exclusive property, it is the action of the thinking power called an idea, which an individual may exclusively possess as long as he keeps it to himself; but the moment it is divulged, it forces itself into the possession of every one, and the receiver cannot dispossess himself of it. Its peculiar character, too, is that no one possesses the less, because every other possesses the whole of it. He who receives an idea from me, receives instruction himself without lessening mine; as he who lights his taper at mine, receives light without darkening me.

There may be scarcity of food or territory, but there is no scarcity of information. This observation made by Thomas Jefferson, was observed by many people before him, particularly St. Augustine. As a great Neo-Platonist that he was, St. Augustine did recognize the abstract meaning grasped by souls (minds) and is shared by everyone.

What I am saying right now is being grasped by you, dear reader, and you can tell everyone else about it. Maybe you can tell your friends to read these words, and there will be more minds grasping my message. But get this! It doesn’t matter how many people grasp the information, I will never lose it

Let me correct myself again … I can lose it if I ever have Alzheimer’s, or am treated with shock therapy … or, as it happens so many times, I forget!

Yet, as G. W. Hegel, Karl Marx, and Karl Popper recognized, culture has a pretty good way of having a life of its own. Each new information shared by many heads generates a Popperian problem-solving process far more aggressively and faster than in nature. In the realm of living things, natural selection is restricted because of scarcity of resources, and its problem-solving process is mostly improper. But in culture, the problem-solving process is a proper one, it is abstract, and it is understood by many minds. Each idea, concept, or expression has a way of generating a whole series of results … just like a Tom Cruise-Scientology video.

For purposes of our discussion, I would like to place this cultural problem-solving process mostly in the techno-scientific realm. This placing has the defect that it places the other strata as being somehow "outside" of culture, when in reality they are also cultural processes. Yet, it has the advantage of treating cultural processes as a sort of economy, which operates on its own, and which is regulated by the juridical-political stratum (see illustration at the top of this blog).

Our distribution of physical wealth is an economy based on principles consistent with our human nature, following rules based on the idea that resources are scarce, and that selfishness should be the main driver of the economy. Yet, when it comes to an economy of information, the rules are different, because the objects being distributed by minds are not based on scarcity at all. Our selfish human nature is revealed in the distribution of scarce goods, but our generosity as part of our human nature is revealed when distribution of goods are not scarce. Interesting irony about our human nature isn’t it?!

=-=-=-=-=
Powered by Blogilo

Tagged with:
 

This article is part of a series of articles on the subject of evolution, ethics and spirituality:

Parts: I, II, III, IV, V, VI (1), VI (2), VII, VIII (1), VIII (2), IX (1), IX (2), IX (3), X (1), X (2), X (3), XI (1), XI (2), XI (3)

Evolution, Ethics, And Spirituality: Part XII — Imperfection and the Economy

A Divine Problem: Imperfection

It is very rare to actually read an economist who shows that he or she is well versed, not only in the economy, but also in philosophy, literature, science, politics, and so on. It is an absolute delight to read Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations, because it shows how brilliant is he as an economist and as a moral philosopher. I love to read Marx’s Capital because hidden in it there is allusion to today’s classics, such as Bram Stroker’s Dracula, or Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. You notice that he has a taste for horror: ghosts, specters, werewolves "transmuting", etc. He also shows a lot of theological and philosophical knowledge throughout his writings. Yet, I fail to remember other more contemporary economists who express themselves this way. Smith’s and Marx’s works are classics and speak to all of us for this reason. Even those of Keynes speak to us and remain relevant. Yet, today, I’m sad to say that most economists are working as technocrats, and have forgotten that touch of Humanities.

Yet, I do think that there is one particular economist who, regardless of what he writes, he shows his intellectual depth, his acquaintance with philosophy, literature and history, and has a great economic insight. I want you to meet this Puerto Rican economist: Francisco Catalá Oliveras.

Francisco Catalá Oliveras

This is a renowned economist in Puerto Rico. The Center for the New Economy (CNE), an organization which works frequently with the Brookings Institution, uses to invite him to give speeches on the economic situation of my country, Puerto Rico. The banking sector and the foreign corporations hate him because he frequently suggests that we should raise taxes on foreign corporations investing in Puerto Rico. Of course, like the Tea Party movement in the U.S., who likes to label anyone it doesn’t agree with its economic policies a "Marxist", our banking sector and corporate industry label him a "Marxist", even though he isn’t. He is now a retired professor of the University of Puerto Rico, and works as advisor for labor unions, cooperatives, and the Puerto Rican Independence Party (PIP). He also advocates for independence for Puerto Rico as the key to its economic growth and better future. We will not be concerned with this particular subject right now, but I wanted to let you know his background.

Catalá is well versed in philosophy and literature, and part of his formation was his reading of Erasmus’ The Praise of Folly (in Spanish Elogio de la locura). Inspired by both literature and history, he wrote one of those books I wish there were a version in English for my English-speaking friends: Elogio de la imperfección (The Praise of Imperfection).

Elogio a la Imperfección

His whole focus of that book is what he calls the Funes Syndrome. Now, if you can’t find such a syndrome in Wikipedia or in any medical journal, don’t worry, he made it up.

Yeah, it sounds like a sort of psychiatric term, yet, its origin is literary. (Ah! There he shows his literary formation again!) He read a short story by the renowned author Jorge Luis Borges called "Funes el memorioso". In it he Borges tells the story of a man who had the perfect memory. He remembered EVERYTHING, even the minutest details … a sort of Adrian Monk, the famous detective played by Tony Shaloub. Yet, unlike Monk, this guy was not a hypochondriac, but rather an insomniac. Funes is tormented by the fact that he is in constant vigil, and his perfect memory enables him to remember everything simultaneously, and his recollections overwhelm him constantly. Ironically, Borges says, the guy could not think. Why is that? Thinking requires abstraction, and abstraction implies forgetting some things to take into account only a few of them. For Funes, there was nothing but immediate details, he couldn’t forget.

Now, what is the Funes Syndrome according to Catalá? It consists of two errors people frequently fall into:

  • The error of believing that perfection is possible in this world.
  • The error of believing that if perfection existed, it would be functional

While I was reading his amazing book, Catalá solved one of the problems which tormented theologians for a long while, one of the aspects of the theodicy problem (i.e. if God exists, then why is there evil in this world?) New atheists like Richard Dawkins cannot point out enough all of the imperfections in the world as a sign that there is no intelligent designer, and, that no God exists at all. Evolution is a messy process, supporting living beings on Earth involves a lot of waste. Our eyes are a mess, and, as I’ve argued before, our brain is too. Why the heck would God choose such a messy process to support living things? Kenneth Miller, who is himself a Roman Catholic, tries to solve it in many ways in his book Finding Darwin’s God. Other authors such as Darrel Falk or Francis Collins try to address that particular problem. Yet, the answer to this problem is so amazingly simple! A perfect world wouldn’t work!

If there is a reason why nature works so well to the point of letting life emerge constantly through evolution, it is because it is an imperfect "blind watchmaker". Why is our brain capable of reasoning? Because it is imperfect and it is all messy regarding how it distributes its functions among its own organs. Life is possible only because death exists. Without death, other living beings cannot arise. The natural creation of objects in the universe exist only because destruction exists. Our Solar System exists because an earlier star "died" and exploded. These things work precisely because the universe is imperfect.

Economists Dealing in Absolutes

"Only a Sith Lord deals in absolutes."
~ Obi-Wan-Kenobi
(Star Wars – Episode III: Revenge of the Sith)

Now, why would an economist in particular be interested in such a very important philosophical subject. The answer is that as an economist he has seen too much of his colleagues fall into the Funes Syndrome. Pro-corporate economists always point out how the powers of the state should be minimized and how the economy would do "just fine" without it. The less the power of the state has over the economy, the "more perfect" (so to speak) the economy would be, capital would flow happily, poverty would be eliminated from the Earth as Adam Smith predicted, and we would live happily ever after.

That doesn’t mean that the economic right-wing is the only one falling into the Funes Syndrome. Marxism does too. Marx is an excellent thinker when you see him diagnose capitalism as a system. Capital is still a work to be read, and look at our economic reality through its lens. Yet, when it comes to evaluate history from the materialist view he proposed, well…. take his proposal cum granus salis (handle with care!). And when it comes to implementing his version of socialism as a transition period to a more just society, such efforts are doomed to failure as history has taught us. We should be fair with him, though. No version of the implementations Marxist socialism resembled remotely what Marx originally had in mind. Yet, that can be a clue to the fact that Marx’s solution was a failure from the very beginning. Right and left-wing versions of Anarchism are no better when it comes to solving the problem. As studies of efforts to build communal life have shown, they all fail in one way or another, mostly because of internal conflicts and tensions within: secular socialist communal societies collapse after a median of two years, and religious communal societies last a median of twenty years (ref. Pinker 2002, p. 257; see Klaw, 1993; McCord, 1989; Muravchik, 2002; Spann, 1989). As the linguist and cognitive scientist Steven Pinker tells us what is wrong with this reasoning:

Studies of altruism by behavioral economists have thrown a spotlight on this sword of Damocles by showing that people are neither the amoral egoists of classical economic theory nor the all-for-one-for-all communalists of utopian fantasies (Pinker, 2002, p. 256).

Part of the failure of implementing any of these economic policies or solutions is that, sometimes, it completely disregards the necessary social conditions for them to be possible, and tries to implement their theories in an absolutist and perfect manner. In the case of those who wish to implement capitalism in the freest way possible, the elimination of state powers is only geared at less economic restrictions by the state. Yet, for some reason, this leads invariably to more state restrictions towards people. For many people this is a mystery, but in reality it isn’t.

Sometimes, blinded by ideology, we want to refuse to believe what Marx reminded us over and over again about the capitalist system: it carries with it the seed of class struggle. Class struggle as understood by Marx is not an ongoing street fight between the bourgeoisie and the proletariat. Class struggle is the result of the fact that wealth is scarce in principle, and the bourgeoisie and the proletariat have opposite interests regarding the way it should be distributed. So, when the state eliminates the restrictions on the economy, and lets the bourgeoisie and capital act the way it wants, it will necessarily lead to more poverty in the working class, and the poverty of people who are not proletariat because of the imperfections in the capitalist system, and depend on state assistance. Obviously, this leads to unrest, protests, and strikes (many times violent), which then require the state to become a militarized or police state.

As Naomi Klein (2007) has shown in her research, this is exactly what happened in Chile, when the Chicago Boys wanted to make Chile an economic blank slate, and start a pure and perfect form of capitalism from scratch after the coup against Salvador Allende. The result? A government under the Augusto Pinochet. It is said that Chile "prospered" under his government, but at the expense of human rights. Despite that, even Pinochet had to implement some socialist measures to alleviate or minimize social unrest. Similar repressive measures were made in many countries in Latin America which led to abduction of opponents of the regime, to killings of families, to outrageous forms of tortures. We can say this has happened in the United States during its history. Lousy history teaching in schools has made people forget completely what happened in the past when capital was free to rule with next to no state restrictions. Invariably it led to more misery, harsh living conditions, continuous violations of human rights which were rarely validated by the courts. If today you have Social Security, pensions, and other benefits, it is because of the huge fights which happened so frequently in the past.

The situation was no different under both the Clinton and the Bush Jr’s administrations, when much restrictions were stricken down. This led to reinforce all sorts of the most repressive sectors of government, especially the military, intelligence operations, and extensive surveillance. Unfortunately, these policies have continued and increased under the Obama administration, whose significant contribution to restricting the economy has been limited to health care, and even THAT is going to be struck down with current Congress or, perhaps, a future Republican (Tea Party?) president..

This does not mean that communism is paradise. As many intellectuals are realizing, even Marxists, communism led to many human rights violations. As Pinker (2002) points out:

The Nazi Holocaust was a singular event that changed attitudes toward countless political and scientific topics. But it was not the only ideologically inspired holocaust in the twentieth century, and intellectuals are only beginning to assimilate the lessons of the others: the mass killings in the Soviet Union, China, Cambodia, and other totalitarian states carried out in the name of Marxism. The opening of Soviet archives and the release of data and memoirs on the Chinese and Cambodian revolutions are forcing a reevaluation of the consequences of ideology as wrenching as that following World War II. Historians are currently debating whether the Communists’ mass executions, forced marches, slave labor, and man-made famines led to one hundred million deaths or "only" twenty-five million. They are debating whether these atrocities are morally worse than the Nazi Holocaust or "only" the equivalent (Pinker, 2002, p. 155; see also literature on this subject: Besançon, 1998; Chirot, 1994 Conquest, 2000; Courtois et al, 1999; Getty, 2000; Minogue, 1999; Shatz, 1999; Short, 1999).

This conviction is reinforced with the fact that today, as much as I sympathize with Venezuela’s Bolivarian government, as well as Ecuador’s government, there have been violations of human rights (although the majority of the cases never reach the level of repression of earlier right-wing governments in Latin America), which have been reported by Amnesty Intentional and Human Rights Watch. In the case of the latter, the head of this organization had been expelled from Venezuela.

How can it be that Marxism, an ideology whose goal is economic justice for all, reach this level of repression, genocide, murder, and so on?

Corporate Amorality

The economy is the result of two things: an evolutionary process, hence the biological constitution of humans, and culture. Groups of organisms have a sort of economy, an ecosystem. It is nothing more that a form of distribution of energy through a food chain. Plants get the energy from the sun, animals eat plants, and other animals eat these animals. Yet, unlike other animals, humans have intelligence and culture, which let us create ways of arranging a form of distribution of energy in the form of wealth, otherwise we wouldn’t be able to live.

To say that economic systems are imperfect is a truism, yet, it is not a trivial one. As we have seen, assuming that a perfect economy is possible can lead to disaster, especially when looked at from an ethical standpoint. And here we touch a very particular subject that sometimes is ill-addressed: the interaction between the economy and ethics.

Today it is a fashion to talk about business ethics. In universities we breathe it. The first time I was going to teach ethics in UPR in Cayey, and talked to some members of the Business Administration faculty, they asked me if I knew anything about "business ethics". That is because it is a new fashion in the business world. Some weeks ago I even received a book by José González Barja called Ética empírica para el éxito (Empirical Ethics for Success), which advocates for "business ethics" to lead people to "success" in the business world (or life in general). Of course, when I studied ethics, I studied philosophical ethics, but had no idea about the particulars of "business ethics". In my naïve attitude, I supposed that it was much like bioethics: the rational examination of biotechnological and medical production and practices from an ethical standpoint. The more I researched business ethics, and the more I talked about it with some of my colleagues in philosophy, the more I came to realize that this was not the case of "business ethics".

"Business ethics" is not a field of Applied Ethics, it only pretends to be. It takes its name too seriously. It stems from the genuine worry by businesspeople regarding the problem of low wages, the gap between the rich and the poor, environmental concerns, and so on. Yet, in its attempt to address these concerns, they make business ethics have as premise the following statement: "Only acting ethically, you will have success in your business". In other words, acting ethically will mean that in the end you will have more benefits, and more money. It is an ethics designed to legitimize business, because, despite the fact that this premise actually begs the question, it suggests that if you are successful, it is because you are behaving ethically. Nothing further from the truth!

Take corporations, for instance. A corporation is a group of people who ask for a charter to create a legal person, which will limit the investors’ (stockholders’) liability. Inherently, corporations have one end: how to produce the maximum wealth possible for the stockholders in the shortest time possible. In the U.S. it became a judicial decision to place the stockholder’s welfare above everything else, including the public good (Dodge v. Ford). The question is, why does the juridical system grant stockholders a limited liability, if ethics leads to financial success? In principle, there shouldn’t be any problems if that were true!

And what sort of person is a corporation? A key to that is what Baron Thurlow said: "They have no soul to save and they have no body to incarcerate." This abstract artifice, the corporation, cannot hurt or be hurt, it is not happy, does not cry, nor does it suffer. The only way it "suffers" is if it loses capital and profit. Does it act ethically at least most of the time? Not necessarily, but these are successful giants, and it is not because they are concerned for what is good. Lacking emotions and empathy, you are left with one sole conclusion: corporations are amoral entities. Don’t believe me? Let Dr. Robert Hare, an FBI consultant on psychopaths explain the whole thing for you.

Yep, you can actually be very highly successful, if you are a psychopath … not if you act ethically.

Many people, even my colleague philosophers, can be deceived by "business ethics", because they see the genuine ethical concerns by businesspeople, and I emphasize the word genuine. I’m not saying that CEOs are not worried about oppressive regimes, or the environment, or sweatshops, or child labor. Many of them are worried about that! They are themselves moral beings, they empathize, they want everyone to be happy, they are for world-peace! They can give you Miss Universe sorts of answers if they participated in that pageant, and mean it! In fact, many CEOs in their personal lives might dedicate their own resources to many good causes.

Yet, at the end of the day, the stockholder has all the judicial system on his side, and will demand of CEOs that they do everything they can to maximize profit now, not matter what. As a result, they will lay off workers, will establish sweatshops, exploit children around the world, contaminate the environment, lie to Congress, and so on. Why? Because there is competition, if you don’t do these things, the competition will squeeze you out, and your corporation is screwed. Corporate obligation is not ethical. Yes, there may be studies that show that paying a good health care or your employees will ensure that they will be more productive, but if my job as a CEO is to maximize profits now, then my duty is to give my workers in salary the minimum of the minimum, which includes no health care.

Don’t get me wrong! I’m not saying that corporations are "evil". There are many products, services, goods, merchandise, that are inherently good for us. Hey, I loved The Dark Knight, I love computers, and they are amazingly useful, and I love books like crazy. Yet, what does that imply? It implies the use of contaminants of the environment, copyright restrictions and penalizations against users who dare use even a small segment of a movie soundtrack, and cutting off trees for paper production… needless to say, paying authors little money in royalties. Corporations are not (ethically) good, but they are not evil either. They are amoral, hence they have no moral conscience, and also inherently irresponsible.

The fallacy of "business ethics" is that it businesspeople can actually make all of these ethical decisions in business management and have more profit because of them. This whole "field" is a humongous non-sequitur. Corporations are externalizing machines, as well as money-making machines. This is a problem for corporations because externalities are their essential trait. If you are not acquainted with the word "externalities", at least learn what it is: an externality occurs when a third-party (not consenting a specific transaction) has to pay for the transaction made by the other two. Due to competition, the maximization of profits, and market pressure, all corporations externalize: let somebody else pay for contaminating the environment, let somebody else pay for the layoffs, let somebody else die in wars while we profit from the oil, let someone else pay for our irresponsible behavior, establishing mortgage rates so high no one is able to pay, or let someone else pay for our bad decision for making the Hummer. If you don’t believe in "externalities" … well… listen to one of the Chicago Boys (Milton Friedman) and a corporate CEO of Interface Global (Ray Anderson) talk about it!

And in the case of Ray Anderson, I strongly sympathize with him. He is the face of a CEO who wants to really look for alternatives to save all living things on Earth. Go and buy his book Confessions of a radical industrialist, and see how he is trying to address environmental concerns. Yet, Interface Global, despite its best efforts, still has to externalize in many other ways, because … at the end of the day, a corporation is all about profit! Interface Global is doing a great job in trying to produce environmentally friendly carpet products, and Ray Anderson is trying his best to convince other CEOs to do the same for their companies. The problem is that it is almost certain to convince an oil CEO at a personal level that climate change is a real phenomenon, and that if we use solar panels, wind, and other alternative energy sources it would be better for humanity. Yet, as a CEO, if those alternatives bring much less income than with oil, then that means much less profit for the shareholders … which means that as a CEO he will do everything it can to bring down all sorts of alternative fuels. Don’t believe me? Just ask yourself Who Killed the Electric Car?, and why corporations are making sure that the only fusion project that is funded is the Tokamak, which hasn’t worked for over 25 years, while much more promising fusion projects which require relatively small funds, like the Focus Fusion Project are underfunded, or not even mentioned in the media!

Also, many people in the "business ethics" arena take refuge in Muhammad Yunus microlending strategy (the banks of the poor). Yet, the strategy itself is also amoral … for one simple reason … the economy itself is amoral.

Economic Problems and Ethical Problems

I need to clarify once again that when I say "amoral", I’m not saying "immoral". What I am saying with "amoral" is that an amoral being is not concerned about the ethical values of right and wrong, or good and evil. Just like nature, the economy is exactly what Dawkins said about nature: "no evil and no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference".

The capitalist system is amoral, a Marxist socialist system tries to be moral, but at the end of the day, for it to work, it has to become amoral. Contrary to the claims made by Ron Paul, there is no such thing as a "compassionate economy". The marketplace is the marketplace: all the problems which arise in an economy depend solely on supply and effective demand. No ounce of ethics get into it at all. Prices in the market do not respond at all to the notions of duty and dignity. These have no place in economic equations. If chocolate prices soar or they flunk, it will depend exclusively on supply and effective demand. There are no decent market prices, there are no evil market prices either.

No economic system is perfect … and it should be that way, no economic system will work if it were perfect! Let’s not fall into the Funes Syndrome. Yet, there is a sense that the economic system is screwed up because of problems which arise inside and outside the economy. From an economic standpoint (in theory) low wages are the result of a combination of criteria that the company takes into account in order to have significant profits and compete in the marketplace. From an ethical standpoint, depending on how low are low wages, they can become inhumane. From a political standpoint it is not good for the state (public) for corporations to do this. Yet, another externality is the cost to the state (public) if government is bribed by corporations or members of the bourgeoisie (to use a Marxian term).

How do we deal with the economic, ethical, and political frameworks?

Stratified Problems and Solutions Model

In the following blog posts I shall be working on what I will call the "Stratified Problems-Solution Model". This will consist of a blend of two proposals:

  • Karl Popper’s Problem-Solving Scheme: which we have discussed at length here and here: the evolutionary problem-solving scheme that Popper posited for epistemological growth, but now placed in the cultural realm in general.

Problem-Solving Scheme

(Generalized Problem-Solving Scheme)

Evolutionary Problem-Solving Scheme

(Popperian Evolutionary Problem-Solving Scheme)

  • The Stratified Model Proposed by André Comte-Sponville. Comte-Sponville is a French philosopher who has dedicated most of his life to make expositions on other philosophers and making ethical reflections on world affairs. His book Le capitalism est-il moral? (Is capitalism moral?) is one of those books which I’m sorry is not available in English. As far as I’m concerned there are only two versions: French and Spanish.

My proposal is nothing more than a slight modification of Comte-Sponville’s proposal with a Popperian touch and other things. It stems from a premise that due to the fact that no aspect of human life is perfect (including the economy), each stratum will generate two sorts of problems:

  1. The internal problems of each stratum.
  2. The external problems generated by a stratum.

This model I’m advocating for will propose a sort of interaction between strata. It will also identify the basic problem with many proposals made by so many thinkers to create "perfect" societies: level confusion. Level confusion is a categorical confusion that occurs when we want to understand or solve the internal processes of a stratum in terms of an external stratum or sets of strata.

The "field" of the so-called "business ethics" is bogus, because it is fundamentally a glorified level confusion: it states that you can act ethically in the internal dynamics of the economy to generate profit. Imagine that! So many universities and businesses have invested so many billions of dollars in something that is not possible. No business can be ethical, and acting ethically will not lead you to wealth.

Sorry for deflating "business ethics" in the minds of so many people.

Sources

Achbar, M. (Prod.), Abbott, J. (Ed.), & Bakan, J. (2005). The corporation. [Documentary]. Zeitgeist Films.

Anderson, R. & White, R. (2009). Confessions of a radical industrialist: profits, people, purpose — doing business by respecting the Earth. NY: St. Martin’s Press.

Bakan, J. (2004). The corporation: the pathological pursuit of profit and power. NY: Free Press.

Besançon, A. (1998, January). Forgotten communism. Commentary, 24-27.

Catalá, F. (2007). Elogio de la imperfección. PR: Ediciones Callejón.

Catalá, F. & Rivera, C. (2010). El movimiento cooperativista en Puerto Rico: un paso más. PR: Ediciones Huracán.

Chirot, D. (1994). Modern tyrants. US: Princeton University Press.

Comte-Sponville, A. (2004). El capitalismo, ¿es moral? Spain: Paidós.

Conquest, R. (2000). Reflections on a ravaged century. NY: Norton.

Courtois, S., Werth, N., Panné, J. L., Pczkowski, A., Bartosek, K., & Margolin, J. L. (1999). The black book of communism: crimes, terror, repression. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Getty, J. A. (2000). The future did not work. Atlantic Monthly, 277, 113-116.

Klaw, S. (1993). Without sin: the life and death of the Oneida community. NY: Penguin.

Klein, N. (2007). The shock doctrine: disaster capitalism. NY: Metropolitan Books.

McCord, W. M. (1989). Voyages to Utopia: from monastery to commune — the search for the perfect society in modern times. NY: Norton.

Minogue,, K. (1999). Totalitarianism: have we seen the last of it? National Interest, 57, 35-44.

Muravchik, J. (2002). Heaven on Earth: the rise and fall of socialism. US: Encounter Books.

Pinker, S. (2002). The blank slate: the modern denial of human nature. US: Penguin Books.

Popper, K. (1994). Knowledge and the body-mind problem: in defence of interaction. London & NY: Routledge.

Shatz, A. (1999). The guilty party. Lingua Franca, B17-B21.

Short, P. (1999). Mao: a life. NY: Henry Holt.

Spann, E. K. (1989). Brotherly tomorrows: movements for a cooperative society in America, 1820-1920 NY: Columbia University Press.

Yunus, M. (2007). Banker to the poor: microlending and the battle against world poverty. US: PublicAffairs.

Yunus, M. (2009). Creating a world without poverty: social business and the future of capitalism. US: PublicAffairs.

Yunus, M. (2010). Building social business. US: PublicAffairs.

=-=-=-=-=
Powered by Blogilo

This article is part of a series of articles on the subject of evolution, ethics and spirituality:

Parts: I, II, III, IV, V, VI (1), VI (2), VII, VIII (1), VIII (2), IX (1), IX (2), IX (3), X (1), X (2), X (3)

Karl R. Popper

Returning to Popper’s Proposal

If there is a common denominator for memeticists is that they all, in one manner or another, thank Karl Popper for the idea of a Darwinian evolutionary growth. Darwin’s theory of evolution establishes that nature is a "blind watchmaker", as Dawkins would say. Yet, culture seems to be another thing altogether. Memetics doesn’t work, because memes are supposed to operate irrationally (blindly), they jump from human brain to human brain and create the illusion that humans have an ego, that they think, that they reason, etc.

But, did Popper actually propose a Darwinist epistemology? Actually he did not, even thought he actually thought he did. Popper is to be blamed for this confusion. There are three reasons for it:

  1. The first big problem which confused Popper has to do with the remarkable resemblance between the way organisms speciate, and the way that culture evolves or develops. In both cases, they both look alike. This is the Popperian diagram on how culture develops (left), and Darwin’s own diagram in The Origin of Species, as we have explained in a previous post (Popper, 1994, p. 62).

    Evolutionary CultureSpeciation According to Darwin

  2. This first problem leads to a second problem: the confusion was that he established a strong analogy (there is that problem again!) between the Darwinian way which living beings evolve non-progressively, and the way culture evolves (Popper, 1994, pp. 60-62). Popper is correct when he says Darwin’s proposal excludes the concept of "progress". Since nature is a "blind watchmaker", it is not trying to "perfect" organisms, rather what organisms do is to survive or die depending on their genetic makeup, behavior, and environmental factors. But this is not true about culture. Yes, there are some cultural aspects which are non-progressive, but this is not true in cases such as science, philosophy, theology, or even fields such as art and literature. In fact, Popper recognizes some of this as deviation from Darwinism (Popper, 1994, pp. 63).
  3. Finally, the third problem: Popper does not establish a clear distinction (although it is confusingly there) among kinds of problems. For instance, he does recognize that at the level of unintelligent organisms, we can talk about "problems" and "solutions" to these "problems". For example, organisms in general have problems regarding survival. Not being able to survive is a "problem", which gene-mutation and natural selection "solve" by predisposing the organism’s brain or its structure to overcome the "problem". Yet, these "problems" are unlike those like these: how many angels can dance on the head of a pin, or the problem of how Mercury does not behave according to Newtonian theory, i.e. problems with no survival value.

    This problem is aggravated by the fact that even when Popper recognizes a teleology in culture, both unintelligent and intelligent organisms create an abstract World 3 (see previous post on these details).

If all of this is problematic for Popper, it is because of one thing. As we have seen in our previous post on memetics, culture is not Darwinian. And by establishing important exceptions to a Darwinian view, Popper is actually denying that culture is Darwinian without realizing it. However "alike" are the process of speciation among living beings, and cultural evolution, in reality culture is Lamarckian. Why? Here is the difference between Darwinian and Lamarckian. "Lamarckian" means that whatever the process is occurring, it has a purpose, a goal. "Darwinian" means the most quoted passage ever from Richard Dawkins:

The universe we observe has precisely the properties we should expect if there is, at bottom, no design, no purpose, no evil and no good, nothing but blind, pitiless indifference (Dawkins, 1995, p. 133).

Of course, after those depressing words, there is a downer within us, but Dawkins has a point. Darwinism is an amoral process. We should not be surprised that we find instances of disgust when we look at nature and are puzzled at how much struggle and suffering can be engines for life and evolution. This is one of the reasons why Darwin could not conceive a Creator Who could be so cruel as to create a ichneumon wasp that would paralyze (but not kill) caterpillars, so that it could lay its eggs within them for its larvae to eat them alive.

Yet, there are many cultural aspects which are concerned with many rational and intelligent aspects of the problem-solving process: design of the economy to make it more effective, the best possible political process, concern with ethical acts, and so on. Nature may not be intelligently designed, but culture is.

This means that we have to understand the realm of culture in very different terms. Here is my suggestion, not exempt from problems, but I think it is the best philosophical direction to this discussion I can think of:

  • Let’s establish a difference between improper problems and proper problems. Improper problems are those which occur unintelligently in nature as "problem for survival" (be them genetic, environmental, or dealing with sexual appeal). Proper problems are those arising from culture, they are intelligently grasped, understood, and recognized, hence requiring intelligent solutions. Improper problems are Darwinian, while proper problems are Lamarckian.
  • Let’s assume, for our discussion Popper’s problem-solving scheme for culture, and avoid the misnomer "Darwinian".

From this perspective, I think that we can properly address the way we have culturally organized society.

Our Ethical Framework

We have already stated that the way organisms develop, and how Darwinian evolution works is essentially amoral. However, we, humans, are moral animals. Theologian John Haught, frequantly points out the difficulty of how amoral processes can give rise to moral beings. Yet, what do we mean by "moral beings" or by the term "amoral"? This needs to be clarified.

  • Amoral: a being or a process whose way of being or its operations are not concerned at all with the ethical values of "right", "wrong", "good", "bad", or "evil". The concepts of "virtue"and "vice" in an amoral being and in amoral operations are not determined at all by ethical values either.
  • Moral Being: a being whose way of behavior is determined by the values of "right", "wrong", "good", "bad", or "evil". The concepts of "virtue" and "vice" are determined by these values.

This is the consequence of being a rational animal, and also a result of the very complex way our brain is designed. When we discussed the way our brain developed as a result of the Darwinian process of exaptation, the article gives us a gist of how we became moral animals:

  1. The R-Complex is where all our basic and fundamental instincts reside. Without them, we wouldn’t have stimuli which are essential to every decision making.
  2. The limbic system is where primary emotions come in. As many labs and studies have shown extensively it is impossible to make rational decisions without emotions. The reason is that the limbic system gives the emotional twist to the instincts provided by the R-Complex, and it provides us with the faculty of empathy. Empathy lets us place ourselves in someone else’s shoes from an emotional standpoint. People without empathy are unable to have feelings of guilt or regret, which are psychologically necessary to develop a good and healthy moral sense.
  3. The neocortex lets us calculate, reason, and rationalize our behavior. It also processes higher level emotional processes. This helps us in the decision making, itself made possible by …
  4. The executive part of the brain, or the frontal lobes. This is the part of the brain where our consciousness (our "self" or our "ego") in the intuitive resides, where we make our decisions, where we actually project the consequences of our actions.

I’ve discussed this in more detail in another blog post in this series.

Without these parts of our brain originated through exaptation, we wouldn’t be able to be moral animals. We must not overestimate ourselves, though. We are not the only moral beings on Earth. Many other primates do share a lesser degree of moral sense: they can be predisposed biologically to be upset when they are lied to, or when there is adultery, or when a member of the group steals. There is a sense of "right" and "wrong" in them.

Of course, multilevel-group selection proposed by David Sloan Wilson and others can explain this perfectly: anything that erodes the trust of the group is rejected by that group. Also, moral behavior, especially with kin organisms within a group, is part of the whole system of solidarity and cooperation that makes a species survive.

For more information on this interesting subject go to http://evolutionofmorality.net.

Now, I have mentioned this notion of moral sense, a term used by David Hume and other philosophers to refer to that feeling or intuition of what is "right" or "wrong". If other animals have moral sense, it would seem that humans are not unique in that sense either. Some people have stated that it is no longer plausible to establish a significant difference between humans and the rest of the animals in terms of reason and morality.

Yet, I beg to differ. The rest of the animals, even those acting with moral sense, are unable to rationally reflect on what they are doing. In humans we find the fact that our brain has a recursive quality: not only am I thinking, but I am also aware that I am thinking, and that I am aware that I am aware that I’m thinking. As Descartes would say: even if I denied that I’m thinking, I’m still thinking. The cogito (our thinking activity) is an essential part of human consciousness.

Due to this self-reflection, we are able to know that even our moral sense can be wrong from time to time. This is one of the great puzzles for those who wish to naturalize ethics. Dawkins said that sometimes we should go against our "selfish-genes" to do what is "right". Yet, he is unable to answer in purely naturalistic terms how do we know what is "right" and when to oppose our selfish genes. If we go to the multilevel group understanding of selection, not always the solidarity system established by organism can be said to be "right" regarding such and such individual. A behavior which alienates a member which a group considers the "odd" one can be beneficial in the amoral evolutionary process, but it is not said to be objectively good. Also, different forms of alienation within the groups (e.g. alienating either males or females, or the weak, or the less able) can be advantageous from an evolutionary standpoint, and yet it is not good from an ethical one.

Hence, we should distinguish between the moral and the ethical. An act is moral if it follows the uses and customs of a society. This might include uses and customs depending on biological dispositions, or adopted culturally by human society. An act is ethical, if it is inherently good. The field of ethics is precisely the one which investigates what is rationally which actions can be called good. This field is subdivided in three:

  • Metaethics: Imagine that some extraterrestrials from planet Melmac, the world of ALF (aka Gordon Shumway), sends a spaceship full of scientists and intellectuals … if that is possible in Melmac :-P … to study and evaluate human behavior. Indeed they would use some rational principles to evaluate those behaviors (supposing that Melmacians are rational). These principles are the concern of metaethics. This is the field that investigates the rational principles which let us evaluate moral norms as being ethical or not.
  • Normative Ethics: This is the field which investigates ethical norms themselves, which should derive from principles investigated by metaethics.
  • Applied Ethics: Given that our experiences in the world does not lead us to "black or white" clear-cut decisions, applied ethics deals with the problem of prioritizing ethical norms in every day life. This can go from bioethics, to environmental ethics, to law, business, etc. Practically most ethicists are dedicated to this field.

There are also two different approaches to the subject of ethical behavior. One is called teleological ethics, that is, the ethical view that we should take a course of action due to the consequences in the long run. It is teleological because it has a goal external to our actions. Utilitarianism which is so praised in the Anglo-Saxon world is a form of teleological ethics.

The other approach is called deontological ethics, which is the ethical view that we should follow ethical norms because they themselves are good, they themselves are our only goal regardless of their consequences.

Each of these views has advantages and disadvantages. My approach from here on will be a deontological, that ethical norms should be followed because they good-in-themselves. This will give us the appropriate framework to discuss ethics within the complexities we find in every day life.

P.S. That you do not know about Planet Melmac???? That you have no idea who Gordon Shumway is (aka ALF)??!!! Here I post two videos to refresh your memory!

References

Dawkins, R. River out of Eden: a Darwinian view of life. US: Basic Books.

O’Hear, A. (1980). Karl Popper. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.

Popper, K. R. (1972). Objective knowledge: an evolutionary approach. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Popper, K. R. (1994). Knowledge and the body-mind problem: in defence of interaction. London: Routledge.

=-=-=-=-=
Powered by Blogilo

Tagged with:
 
Bookmark and Share