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Self-Interest, Part 1
FEE ^ | Donald J. Boudreaux

Posted on 03/12/2003 6:31:52 PM PST by dcwusmc

Asked on camera by John Stossel “Who has done more good for humanity, Michael Milken or Mother Teresa?” philosopher David Kelley unhesitatingly answered, “Michael Milken.” Kelley is surely correct. But I’ve spoken to many people who are horrified by this answer. Mother Teresa’s name is synonymous with good deeds and humanitarian concern. In contrast, Michael Milken was a businessman, a financier. To comfort others, Mother Teresa sacrificed herself. Michael Milken did what he did only to make money for himself.

Self-interested motives are so frowned on—and other-regarding motives so admired —that the typical pundit, politician, and pedestrian believes that motives are all that matter. Mother Teresa is admired because of her motives, not because of her results. Michael Milken and other business people are famous—or, in many circles, infamous— largely because of the personal fortunes they’ve accumulated rather than because of the huge benefits their goods and services bestow on millions of people around the world.

One response to those who judge a person exclusively by his motives was made famous by Adam Smith. It says: Look, almost everyone is naturally self-interested. Whether or not this fact is regrettable, it is unalterably true. So let’s deal with reality. As it happens, a free market encourages self-interested people to act in ways that benefit others. So we need not spend much time lamenting people’s self-interest.

Being a great admirer of Adam Smith, I find this line of argument compelling. But having now taught for 20 years, I’ve learned that it leaves a sour taste in the mouths of many students. “But wouldn’t it be great if we all were like Mother Teresa?” students earnestly ask.

No, it would not be great. It would be catastrophically bad.

Self-interest is not merely an unchanging fact of reality that, as regrettable as it might be in the abstract, turns out to be okay in a free-market society. Instead, self-interest is necessary to make a large economy work. If each of us cared as much for strangers as we care for ourselves and our loved ones, our lives would certainly be poor and short, and possibly also solitary, nasty, and brutish. At least two reasons justify my claim that self-interest is a benefit to humankind—that our world would be worse, not better, if selfinterest were not part of our mental makeup.

This month I’ll address the first reason. I’ll address the second reason next month. While it’s difficult to imagine the supposed ideal of universal love—a world in which no one distinguishes the welfare of strangers from that of himself and his loved ones— try to conjure in your mind this imaginary scenario.

One thing to notice is that, with everyone caring deeply about everyone else, our world would be a tyranny of busybodies. I often scold myself for caving into my weak- nesses—for sleeping too late, for spending too little time with my young son, for eating too many potato chips, for buying that new necktie that I don’t really need, and so on. I then try to govern myself by leveling selfimposed penalties for these failures. In other words, because I care deeply about myself, I “interfere” in my own life in order to improve my life’s prospects.

Caring for Strangers

If I cared equally as much about some stranger in Santa Fe or Santiago, would I resist interfering in his life to govern his choices in ways that, to me, seem best? “Sir, you shouldn’t watch so much TV; your time would be better spent reading Tolstoy” or “Mr. Jones, you should put that extra $100 into your savings rather than spend it on tickets for a football game.” Remember, we’re imagining that I care as much about this stranger as I care about myself; he means the world to me. I truly yearn for him to have a happy and good life; I desire this outcome every bit as much as I desire to have such a life for myself and every bit as much as I desire that my son enjoy such a life. It would pain me terribly to see this beloved stranger make choices that seem to me to be unwise for him.

The problem is, while I might care as much about this stranger as I care about myself, I do not know this stranger as well as I know myself. I don’t know his abilities, his history, his likes, his dislikes, his fears, his pleasures, his circumstances. After all, he’s a stranger. Because he knows his situation better than anyone else, he is best positioned to make decisions for himself. My trying to do so, even if I care passionately about his wellbeing, would substitute the judgment and discretion of an ignorant party (me) for that of an informed party (him).

One happy consequence of self-interest is that it aligns concern with knowledge. Each of us knows most about himself, and each of us is concerned mostly about himself. That person to whom each of us directs the bulk of his life’s energy and interest is that person whom each of us knows most about. In short, it’s good that I care mostly about myself because I’m the person who knows most about myself. Likewise, it’s good that I don’t care as much about you as you care about you because I don’t know as much about you as you know about you. And you surely don’t want me to disturb you with my well-meaning but ill-informed attempts to govern your life. That would be harassment, not helpfulness.

Self-interest doesn’t strip people of their concern for others, but it does confine that concern to appropriate realms. I care not only about myself; I care also, very deeply, about my family. This concern is appropriate because I know a great deal about my son, my wife, my parents, and my siblings. I care also about my friends, although not with the same intensity that I care about my family. I know my friends pretty well—much better than I know strangers, but not as well as I know my family.

Self-interest not only prompts each of us to care for himself and his loved ones, but also—and importantly—it helps to keep each of us from attempting to meddle in the affairs of those whom we know too little.

Ideas on Liberty • February 2003


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How to Keep an Account At Free Republic
Posted on 08/29/2003 12:58 PM PDT by tappers
1. Use a dialup ISP with randomly-assigned ISP numbers, such as AOL or NetZero or such, one which allows you to create new e-mail account (screen) names. This will facilitate re-registering in case your account gets banned in spite of your care (as one of mine was).
2. Post only plain-vanilla comments. Nothing controversial. Nothing too witty or sharp. Letting on you know a lot -- or that you are sharp -- will raise suspicions and make them feel threatened. This could make you a target for banning at the first infraction, real or imagined.
3. Misspellings are good. Sprinkle in a few and it makes you less threatening. Use common ones like "looser" and "truely" and such. Misuse an apostrophe or two, and throw in some poor grammar. Don't overdo any of this. Moderation is the key. As is consistency -- don't use perfect spelling and grammar in some posts and imperfect in others.
4. Keep all posts short, short, short -- one or two short sentences at most. This lowers your profile somewhat, but makes your posts easy to read, and therefore your screen name will become increasingly familiar. After a few months, you will be considered a non-threatening good guy, one of the regulars, although definitely not a top-tier freeper. That is an unattainable class, an exclusive clique whose numbers and members are firmly established. There are no new openings in that clique and never again will be.
5. Never ping a moderator. Period. You do not want to become a poster of moderator-interest on any level.
6. Never post anything that gives away that you are versed in freeper lore, or are unusually familiar with how things work. On the other hand, don't pretend you are a newbie either. Suspicions run very high at TOS, and anything you do to call attention to yourself ("Look, I'm a newbie") can work against you. The brownshirts are always looking for someone to accuse of witchcraft and party disloyalty and turn in.
7. Watch current events and leading Republican statements, positions, and administration comments CAREFULLY and post circumspectly. This is probably the biggest key to preserving a screen name. Because Republican positions shift to the left with increasing frequency, you may post something routinely conservative and find you have raised ire over there because someone with an (R) behind their name has recently denounced or abandoned that traditional position. Your first clue that this has happened is a complete lack of response to your reply. Fear rules the day at TOS now, and few will dare speak up and agree with you if it means going against a party line, even if it is a brand new party line. No one will risk provoking the low rumbles of displeased thunder from the moderator mountaintop.
9. Speaking of sickeningly sycophantic toadies -- don't be one. This could draw undue attention and be taken as sarcasm. Result: Bye bye. Don't post falsely (as in pretending to be a picture-licking Bushbot), as that is clearly, purposely deceptive. Don't post at all on a given topic or thread if you can't post innocuously. Post plain-vanilla (as mentioned earlier) and save the controversial stuff for far down the line. Sure it's boring, but it's smart. Compliment occasionally as you can and as the situation calls for it, but never overdo it, and never compliment for a political position that will give away your own position.
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1 posted on 08/29/2003 12:58 PM PDT by tappers
21 posted on 08/29/2003 1:13:52 PM PDT by tpaine ( I'm trying to be Mr Nice Guy, but politics keep getting in me way. ArnieRino for Governator!)
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