Difference between revisions of "David Brin/The Ultimate Goal"

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Locke's basic idea still appears sound, as a rough metaphor.  An implicit contract does make sense as a model of what we observe in primitive societies.  Consider the dark millennia which lasted until a few centuries ago. During most of those years, the lives of peasants and poor craftsmen were brutal and short. Bandits were always conspiring to steal what little people had, or worse, to become aristocrats themselves, and make slaves of everyone else.   
 
Locke's basic idea still appears sound, as a rough metaphor.  An implicit contract does make sense as a model of what we observe in primitive societies.  Consider the dark millennia which lasted until a few centuries ago. During most of those years, the lives of peasants and poor craftsmen were brutal and short. Bandits were always conspiring to steal what little people had, or worse, to become aristocrats themselves, and make slaves of everyone else.   
  
But once a line of aristocracy was established, a curious thing happened. Quite often the grandchildren of bandit lords, well-fed from birth and benefiting from what passed for education in such times, turned out to be rather well suited to rule. It wasn't that they were in any way more deserving, only that nourished brains and literacy could only be provided to a few individuals from the meager surplus available at the time. A young man who was already part of a dynasty, and not rapaciously obsessed with creating a new one, might actually, on occasion, rule wisely.
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But once a line of aristocracy was established, a curious thing happened. Quite often the grandchildren of bandit lords, well-fed from birth and benefiting from what passed for education in such times, turned out to be rather well suited to rule. It wasn't that they were in any way more deserving, only that nourished brains and literacy could only
 
 
A careful look at history shows that, for all of their petty wars and brutality, this pattern seemed to work about as well as could be hoped. And when it failed, peasants often <i>did</i> rebel.<sup>[http://worldselectshop.com/?id=9361 In a sense, Locke's implicit social contract is simply a description of the obvious.
 
 
 
Contrast this age-old pattern with one of the dream icons held dear by Libertarians &ndash; the <i>explicit</i> social contact. This is a contractual agreement between the individual and his or her society, worked out anew with each adult, who knowledgeably signs away a carefully chosen, narrow range of action-rights in exchange for certain benefits of cooperative society.  For example, some contend that under true federalism each state in the Union should experiment with its own social structure, under the very broad umbrella of national defense and the Bill of Rights. Any man or woman, at age eighteen, would have the opportunity to sign a covenant, <i>explicitly agreeing</i> to the codes and customs and laws of his or her home state. Or, disagreeing, the youth would move to another commonwealth with institutions more to his or her liking.
 
 
 
 
 
 
If Locke's vision of implicit charters between peasants and bandit kings lies at one pole, this libertarian idea of an <i>explicit</i> social contract, one negotiated afresh with each new citizen, is at the other. We see where we have been and where we might go. To those who dream of this particular end to authority, any present-day society might therefore be judged by two simple criteria --
 
 
 
# by how far it has progressed, evolving from the implicit to the explicit social contract, and,
 
# by its prospects for further evolution in that direction.
 
 
 
Now let's return to those three anti-authoritarian assumptions we examined earlier. The first two, Marxism and Libertarianism, each posit that an ideal society of freedom, dignity and prosperity is possible, indeed likely, if only certain impediments are removed.
 
 
 
While Marxism foresees that era coming as a natural consequence of capital accumulation and the behavior of mass classes, Libertarians prescribe removing government shackles to begin the era of explicit contracts and true individual liberty.  If today's neocons are heirs of Hobbes and Plato, Libertarians and Marxists are both true heirs of Rousseau.
 
 
 
The third philosophy &ndash; which might be called Maturationism &ndash; is descended from the pragmatists of the 18th Century Enlightenment, such as Locke, Washington, Franklin, Madison and Jefferson. Sharing the goal of an open, coercion-resistant society of free adults, it contends that <i>no such ideal society was possible during thousands of years of darkness, but now it may be.</i> 
 
 
 
Marxists and Libertarians agree that our present civilization is thwarting progress and thus in desperate need of drastic surgery, Maturationism, in contrast, makes the provocative suggestion that <i>we might not be doing so badly, all considered.</i>  That progress from the implicit to explicit social contract is actually quite rapid, in the society around us.<sup>[http://worldselectshop.com/?id=9361 is right?  Who has the correct prescription for getting us to the near-ideal world we anti-authority-folk dream of for our grandchildren?  Each movement has hordes of sincere followers.  United, they might all achieve something toward their common goal. Alas, each seems to demand action contrary to the proposals of the others.
 
 
 
Or do they?  Is that conflict more illusory than real?
 
 
 
Rather than writing prescriptions, the purpose of this article has been to criticize and set in perspective some of the totems which have crippled reasoned political debate for far too long. Stereotypes and unquestioned caricatures, while deeply, sensuously satisfying, have all too often caused us to wind up lumped in alliance with folks whose deepest goals would be anathema to us, while locking us in conflict against some with whom we might have common cause.  In criticizing these stereotypes, I've offered a few suggestions for alternative ways of looking at things, ways which might illuminate issues better than the fatuous [http://worldselectshop.com/?id=9361 political map|"left" and "right" model]].
 
 
 
I don't pretend these metaphors are perfect.  If they stir a debate, leading to something even better, that would be fine.
 
 
 
The best use of metaphors, after all, is to help us pry away from our rigid assumptions in order to learn something, rather than serving as stage scenery to cover and conceal the real world. They should elicit discussion and inquiry, rather than shouting matches. They should free us, rather than constrain us.
 
 
 
If these aren't the effects <i>your</i> metaphors have on you, and those around you, it just may be time to find some new ones, and throw the old ones away.
 
==Footnotes==
 
===note4===
 
Almost always immediately handing their leashes over to new bandits, alas.
 
===note5===
 
It is a viewpoint that has one major drawback. Maturationism does not provide potential adherents the delicious satisfactions of self-righteousness and resentment, offered by most political-religious movements. (See: http://www.davidbrin.com/addiction.html)
 
 
 
One especially jarring irony emerges from this metaphor of implicit-&gt;explicit social contracts.  Suddenly, one can see the reason for the <i>complexity of modern law.</i>  You would expect, during this progression from arbitrary whim-rule by kings toward full autonomy for all adults, for more and more of the social "contract" to involve negotiated deals, not just in (libertarian approved) commercial deals but also in codes enacted via negotiated political processes &ndash; in other words state law.  Because, until the Internet, there were no tools for dealing with the vast number of possible contingencies on an individual by individual basis.  Even now it is only starting to seem possible, though these tools are rapidly taking shape.  Hence, might one look at today's complex law as an<i> awkward intermediate stage?</i>  On the way from simple tyranny to another simple condition called maturity? From implicit social contracts toward individually explicit ones?
 
 
 
More on this later.
 
==Reader Comments==
 
''from the original posting at LRC''
 
* [http://worldselectshop.com/?id=9361 Kristan Overstreet] wrote at March 13, 2006 8:17 PM</p>
 
<blockquote>This essay offers nothing for persons like myself, who deny utopia and who do not believe in the perfectability of humanity.</blockquote>
 
 
 
*[http://worldselectshop.com/?id=9361 Nathan Pannbacker] wrote at March 14, 2006 3:31 AM
 
<blockquote>
 
<p>I do not believe in utopia, but believe that we do have much potential to improve our current society.  Perhaps mine is an ironic viewpoint, for I believe that while rejecting utopia, one must never cease striving towards it.</p>
 
 
 
<p>Nevertheless this essay is interesting.  In addition to raising some thought-provoking questions and attempting to answer them, it was written in an interesting and sometimes downright humorous way that few political-oriented documents are.</p>
 
</blockquote>
 
 
 
* [http://worldselectshop.com/?id=9361 David Brin] wrote at April 21, 2006 2:23 AM
 
<blockquote>
 
<p>Exactly!  You guys demonstrate two of the basic political personalities.  Cynicism and modernism.  Cynics learn on the playground, early, to snarl with a curled lip at kids who express eagerness to improve, even when they achieve their goals.  It wins points... but it'  a silly basis for fostering progress.</p>
 
 
 
<p>Modernists have a different madness, a belief in incremental improvability that would have been deemed insane in most human cultures, when there were so few modalities to use in pursuing that goal.  Today we DO have a myriad modalities and have improved more that all other generations combined.  Yet try persuading a cynic!</p>
 
 
 
<p>This leaves out the third general class, of romantic utopians... by far the worst and most dangerous.  They believe in improving humans and humanity via drastic experimental surgery!  Yipes!  From Marxists to Randroids, they have a "way" and heaven help any society where the romantics take over.</p>
 
 
 
<p>Liberal modernism is the root of markets, wherein self-improvement AND social improvement take place via incremental creativity in goods, services and solutions.  It it TOTALLY illogical for a "libertarian" not to be a modernist... yet most are not.  As I said, this runs deeper than logic.  It's personality.  The movement is controlled by fanatics WHO DO NOT ACTUALLY BELIEVE IN IT!</p>
 
 
 
<p>Today, modernism is under seige by romantics of left, right, whatever.  But it must be allowed to move ahead.  The crux?  Either we improve or we die.</p>
 
 
 
<p>drop by http://www.davidbrin.blogspot.com/  !</p>
 
 
 
<p>db</p>
 
</blockquote>
 
* [http://worldselectshop.com/?id=9361 Kristan Overstreet] wrote at April 21, 2006 12:07 PM
 
<blockquote>
 
<p>This doesn't change the fact that your article is based upon the eventual change of human nature. I believe that human nature has not changed a bit in all of recorded history; we have just made some improvements in dealing with it.</p>
 
 
 
<p>There is no space in your article for the viewpoint that human beings default to being petty, selfish, sadistic and corrupt, that a perfect system is impossible while this nature presists, and that the best we can do is channel these urges in directions where they will do the most good and least harm.</p>
 
</blockquote>
 
* [http://worldselectshop.com/?id=9361 Michael Coffee] wrote at April 25, 2006 12:21 PM
 
<blockquote>
 
<p>I don't identify with any of the catagories. I just want folks to stop bullying each other. I also don't believe that freedom requires a change in human nature. I think freedom is an individuals natural state. 'Improvement' is a very subjective word. I agree that basic human nature is fundamentally unchanged since before the first tools. Technological and cultural 'improvement' has happened in fits and starts, though.</p>
 
 
 
<p>People don't have to change from everybody being 'bad' to everybody being 'good' for liberty to succeed. Just attacking peaceful, honest people should be made illegal for everybody, and enforced equally. If the option of the legal authority to impose your will on others is removed; and all theft, assault, fraud, etc., become crimes prosecuted by law, then society will necessarily become more civil.</p>
 
 
 
<p>'offended' is completely subjective, too. "Thou shalt not change what belongs to someone else against their will and without their consent." (you need both to allow for surprise parties and such; they may still want something that they didn't consent to; or change may occur that ) would be a more objective and universal law. Then the 'jury', when necessary, would have only to prove ownership, the change wrought, and the fact that the owner didn't want the change. Then the one who made the change would have to make the owner 'whole'. It would cover fraud, too; since the 'victim' actually owned what was agreed to, and the 'change' was the difference between the agreement and the performance.</p>
 
 
 
<p>Anyway, it would be a start.</p>
 
</blockquote>
 
* [http://worldselectshop.com/?id=9361 Michael Coffee] wrote at April 25, 2006 12:24 PM
 
<blockquote>
 
<p>I meant</p>
 
<p>....or change may occur that the owner likes, or is indifferent to, even though they didn't consent to it.)</p>
 
</blockquote>
 
* [http://worldselectshop.com/?id=9361 Brent Miller] wrote at June 10, 2006 1:35 PM
 
<blockquote>
 
<p>I completely agree with Kristan.</p>
 
<p>While our culture and technology has evolved, the fundamental nature of human beings has not.  Plato and Socrates were complaining about corruption in democracy 2,300 years ago.  Today we have cars, the internet, and I-Pods... but we still have corruption in democracy.  I have the sneaking suspicion - and a number of anthropoligists I have read about would agree - that our amazing social progress over the past 6,000 years has more to do with the evolution of technology than the evolution of human nature.</p>
 
<p>So, until we can change human nature via psychological training or genetic manipulation (QUITE un-libertarian), we will never have a utopian society.  Alas, we must be content to make small gains here and there, knowing that we will never be perfect.</p>
 
</blockquote>
 
* [http://worldselectshop.com/?id=9361 Timothy West] wrote at June 11, 2006 12:50 AM
 
<blockquote>
 
<p>eh. I'm overloading on this stuph.</p>
 
<p>you know what was good about MY day? First day without chemo drugs and radiation treatments in 34 days. :D</p>
 
<p>I think a lot about how the US and the LP could be better, but today I'm thinking it's more cool that I feel better for the first time in a long time.</p>
 
<p>self serving but accurate.</p>
 
</blockquote>
 
* [http://worldselectshop.com/?id=9361 Kristan Overstreet] wrote at June 13, 2006 11:37 AM
 
<blockquote>
 
<p>Thanks for putting my being stranded in Dallas with no auto transmission this past weekend in perspective, Tim.</p>
 
</blockquote>
 
* [http://worldselectshop.com/?id=9361 Eric Downes] wrote at August 25, 2006 5:37 PM
 
<blockquote>
 
<p>One need not believe in a fundamental change in human nature to
 
appreciate what David Brin is saying, I think.</p>
 
 
 
<p>Has anyone here ever tutored kids?  Especially kids who have a
 
very different background than yours (e.g. inner city or indian res. or
 
rich urbanite or whatever)  Oh you should.  i did this for a brief stint
 
in highschool and again in college.</p>
 
 
 
<p>I observed that the environment in which a child develops strongly
 
influences how trusting (s)he is of others and ** how much patience
 
they have to learn **.  I am not advocating environmental
 
determinism by any means, but the economic and social
 
environment in which you develop helps certain innate qualities
 
shine through or smolder within.  It is exactly this kind of social
 
environment we are really trying to improve through our effforts at
 
attaining more freedom.  So, no, utopias don't exist, and human
 
nature doesn't change, but there are processes of innovation and
 
validation that allows the state in which we live to improve.</p>
 
 
 
<p>And thus hopefully our great-grandchildren wil look back and laugh
 
at our silly notions (while also acknowledging our earnest efforts), not
 
because they are innately better people, but because the society in
 
which they grew up has allowed them the freedom and the tools
 
(e.g. the technology and the knowledge) to *develop* into better
 
people.</p>
 
</blockquote>
 
* [http://worldselectshop.com/?id=9361 Tim Crowley] wrote at February 1, 2007 9:47 PM
 
<blockquote>
 
<p>In a way, this points out why the current LP is not very good at forming and maintaining coalitions.</div><p>You must be a member and logged in to add a comment of your own.</p>
 
</blockquote>
 

Revision as of 10:42, 21 January 2011