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June 29, 2011

Is Liberal Society a Parasite on Tradition?

SamBowles Sam Bowles in Philosophy and Public Affairs (slightly technical):

The parasitic liberalism thesis, advanced in many variants over the past two centuries, holds that the proper functioning of markets and other institutions endorsed by liberals depends on family-based, religious, and other traditional social norms that are endangered by these very institutions. Liberal society thus is said to fail Rawls’s test of stability: it does not “generate its own supportive moral attitudes.”

Consistent with the thesis, market-like incentives are sometimes counterproductive, apparently because they displace preexisting ethical commitments in favor of a self-interested strategic mode of reasoning, as Richard Titmuss claimed is the case when monetary incentives are deployed to encourage blood donations. Until recently, skeptics of the parasitic liberalism thesis could point to the paucity of hard evidence that market-like incentives compromise ethical motives. However, recent experimental studies show that while the “moral sentiments” underpinning the workings of markets and other institutions endorsed by liberals are common in most human populations,3 the same experiments also indicated that incentives that appeal to material self-interest often undermine interpersonal trust, reciprocity, fairness, and public generosity.

Posted by Robin Varghese at 12:10 PM | Permalink

Comments

Fascinating. There is something very right, and something very wrong about what Sam Bowles is doing here.

Posted by: Jonathan Halvorson | Jun 29, 2011 9:35:56 PM

Not sure what to make of this. It sounds directionally correct, but..

I know this is considered rude by people using analytical tools such as these, but I have very little faith in the meaningfulness of the formalization and the presented formulae/models (they are far too sparse, reductionist and discrete). In addition, although the graphs are all very spiffy, the fact that they are unitless makes their shapes seem a bit arbitrary.
While such thought experiments are nice, the feeling I get while reading this is very strongly one of the argument being circular. (I have similar doubts about the meaningfulness of the data from the games.)
Having said that, I don't really have time to read and think on it well.

Posted by: Foppe | Jun 30, 2011 4:26:58 PM

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