[EM] Time of trouble? Or put a lid on it?
Michael Allan
mike at zelea.com
Sun Feb 1 17:46:10 PST 2009
Juho Laatu wrote:
> I'm not sure that inequality would be a
> requirement. Full equality in terms of
> wealth and power is impossible to achieve,
> but we can approximate that at some
> agreed/suitable level (e.g. by balancing
> the differences a bit where needed) - and
> still keep the natural competitive forces
> alive as the forward driving force in the
> society (and its economy).
So the realm of possiblity may contain mechanisms to correct the gross
inequalities of opportunity etc. that divide class from class, and
nation from nation. You and I can discuss this possiblity in abstract
terms, like "cultured gentleman".^[1] But what is the path from
possiblity to actuality? And what are the danger points along the
way?
1. A voting system is instituted in the public sphere, thus lifting
the lid of the pot.
People are free to express themselves on issues of gross
disparity, to be heard, and to build consensus. The inter-class
and inter-national tensions that were formerly suppressed and
suspended are thus thematized in discussion and floated for
political action. What shall the action be? Everyone is
talking, voting...
2. Stuff happens.
3. Eventually reason prevails. The dwellers in the favelas and the
peasents in the villages (despite long suppressed bitterness and
anger) enter into a more-or-less rational discussion with the
weathly entrepreneurs and landowners.
4. A promising "disparity correction" mechanism is discovered, and
talked about.
5. A rough consensus emerges that, yes, this is the very mechanism
we want.
6. Political action follows. The mechanism is emplaced.
7. It fails.
8. Stuff happens.
Steps 2 and 8 are problematic. What kind of stuff can happen?
[1] In Bertrand Russell's History of Western Philosophy, in the
chapter on Aristotle's Politics, the last few paragraphs frame a
broad context for discussing the extremes of democracy, reaction
and counter-reaction.
http://books.google.ca/books?id=Ey94E3sOMA0C&pg=PA187#PPA187,M1
That's p. 187, which contains the text "Aristotle's fundamental
assumptions... the rise of industrialism... Both for good and
evil, therefore, the day of the cultured gentleman is past."
--
Michael Allan
Toronto, 647-436-4521
http://zelea.com/
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