[J. S.] Mill offered a number of independent justifications for his famous harm principle, but one of his most important claims is that individuals are in the best position to know what is good for them. In Mill’s view, the problem with outsiders, including government officials, is that they lack the necessary information. Mill insists that the individual “is the person most interested in his own well-being,” and the “ordinary man or woman has means of knowledge immeasurably surpassing those that can be possessed by any one else.” ...Unreliable cognitive heuristics turn up again! In fact, the article mentions several by name that we have recently discussed. The fallout of these demonstrates that we should not be free.
But is it right? That is largely an empirical question... Many believe that behavioral findings are cutting away at some of the foundations of Mill’s harm principle, because they show that people make a lot of mistakes, and that those mistakes can prove extremely damaging.
For example, many of us show “present bias”... Many of us procrastinate and fail to take steps that would impose small short-term costs but produce large long-term gains....
People also have a lot of trouble dealing with probability. In some of the most influential work in the last half-century of social science, Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky showed that in assessing probabilities, human beings tend to use mental shortcuts, or “heuristics,” that generally work well, but that can also get us into trouble....
Even when there is only harm to self, [behavorist Sarah Conly] thinks that government may and indeed must act paternalistically so long as the benefits justify the costs.So there you go. That's where the best and brightest are headed.
Conly is quite aware that her view runs up against widespread intuitions and commitments. For many people, a benefit may consist precisely in their ability to choose freely even if the outcome is disappointing. She responds that autonomy is “not valuable enough to offset what we lose by leaving people to their own autonomous choices.” Conly is aware that people often prefer to choose freely and may be exceedingly frustrated if government overrides their choices. If a paternalistic intervention would cause frustration, it is imposing a cost, and that cost must count in the overall calculus. But Conly insists that people’s frustration is merely one consideration among many. If a paternalistic intervention can prevent long-term harm—for example, by eliminating risks of premature death—it might well be justified even if people are keenly frustrated by it....
At the same time, Conly insists that mandates and bans can be much more effective than mere nudges. If the benefits justify the costs, she is willing to eliminate freedom of choice, not to prevent people from obtaining their own goals but to ensure that they do so.
It occurs to me that, if they're going to insist on a utilitarian calculus of this sort, those of us who favor liberty can alter the calculus by raising the costs of coercion. If autonomy is not valuable enough to offset the benefits of us being led around by the nose, perhaps we should prepare to enforce some extra costs on anyone who attempts to deny us our traditional freedoms.
10 comments:
Well, to be fair, the sort of social opprobrium that used to get exercised to get people to 'act right' doesn't seem much too different.
Yeah, but Mill was opposed to that too. Largely on behalf of his wife, whom he regarded as having suffered very unfairly for not living according to society's standards.
In fact, that aspect of Mill is going to be hard to rebut without losing the justification for a lot of 20th century liberation movements. The "they're better off this way, because think what horrible things these poor incompetents would do without us to lead them" is the 19th century proslavery argument. You could frame a pro-paternalist argument on these terms pointed especially at the black community in America, if you wanted to risk the reaction. Look at all these statistics that show their community is so much worse than any other; their heuristics must be correspondingly worse. It's better for them if we should take away some of their choices, impose a few mandates...
"those of us who favor liberty can alter the calculus by raising the costs of coercion."
Well said, Sir!
The language and tone of these people has an uncomfortable similarity to a farmer talking about his animals.
I'm right there with you on raising the costs of coercion. Little utilitarian putzes.
I'm going to have to start a foundation to treat the scourge of U.C.H. It is funny, isn't it, how the word "heuristics" suddenly seems to crop up in every article I read?
What these Progressives carefully, cynically, elide is that government is populated by men--who are subject to all of those same...unreliable cognitive heuristics.
The critical difference is that when that unreliable cognitive heuristics-infested government makes mistakes, it damages the entire nation and every man, woman, and child in it. When an individual makes an identical mistake, the damage he causes is rather more circumscribed.
Herb Croly wrote
To be sure, any increase in centralized power and responsibility, expedient or inexpedient, is injurious to certain aspects of traditional American democracy. But the fault in that case lies with the democratic tradition; and the erroneous and misleading tradition must yield before the march of constructive national democracy…. [T]he average American individual is morally and intellectually inadequate to serious and consistent conception of his responsibilities as a democrat.
What he failed to recognize was his own unreliable cognitive heuristics: when he wrote that, he was standing between two mirrors and not seeing the average American, but himself and his fellow Progressives.
Eric Hines
What he failed to recognize was his own unreliable cognitive heuristics: when he wrote that, he was standing between two mirrors and not seeing the average American, but himself and his fellow Progressives.
We don't need no stinkin' heuristics, buddy!
We don't need no stinkin' heuristics, buddy!
My heuristics don't stink....
Eric Hines
By the way, Anonymous 12:27 --
I've been meaning to mention it, but house rules require you to pick and stick with an alias. You don't have to register and can continue to post anonymously, as long as you sign your alias at the bottom of the post; but we do have a community of a sort here, which means we need to know what to call you! Otherwise, we'd end up with 10 "Anonymous" posters, and we wouldn't be able to carry on a conversation.
Conly is quite aware that her view runs up against widespread intuitions and commitments. For many people, a benefit may consist precisely in their ability to choose freely even if the outcome is disappointing. She responds that autonomy is “not valuable enough to offset what we lose by leaving people to their own autonomous choices.”
I think I've come up with a compromise. If I agree that Conly is too stupid to make good decisions for herself, will she agree to leave me alone?
Seriously! And what's more, they're making the mistake in believing that government DOES know better than you, or has better heuristics. Which is patently and demonstrably false! Hell, we're talking about how stupid the government is in the thread above! What kind of moron (or government in this case) spends 1.5 times more than it brings in, and thinks itself qualified to tell the rest of us how to live?
The thinking seems to be that the government decides as an abstract matter how much needs to be spent, and then it's up to the taxpayers to come up with it, failing which the government will borrow it whether we like it or not. Or we will be asked to "compromise" by letting them make a small downward adjustment in the rate of increase of spending, while we pay higher taxes, because that's "balance."
I haven't paid any taxes to speak of for several years now, so none of this discussion hits me personally in the pocketbook. But I'd happily start making money again and pay higher taxes if I could somehow ensure that spending would absolutely decrease -- not just accelerate more slowly. That compromise, somehow, is never on offer. Failing that, my vote is permanently stuck on "no new taxes, and decrease the existing ones if possible." Because nothing about the proposed new taxes in the last several years has had anything whatsoever to do with addressing the deficit. It is strictly about funding an expansion of government that I am unalterably opposed to.
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