One of these fine days I'll get the hang of multi-quote but in the interim!
BTW we are way off topic, so I'll restrict the answers down.
* This idea cannot be sumised in a line or two. See Christine Korsgaard's "The Sources of Normativity"(2004) Cambridge University Press which aims to explain the origins of human morality.
BTW we are way off topic, so I'll restrict the answers down.
I understand your point, but as long as inherited assets were originally legally acquired, then taking those assets away is a serious infringement of freedom and property rights. If you start off with a situation where everyone owns the same and 50 years later some people own more than others, then it is either because they acquired them through coercion, fraud or theft (in which case there is an important role for government) or they bought assets from people that were free to sell and chose to do so.
While I can see how the idea of forced redistribution seems appealing, and in the short run even a logical solution to solve the problem, I believe that it has much more detrimental affects on the wealth and well-being of less well off people in society. Let me explain.
There is a commonly stated anecdote that says that the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer. This is simply not true. As the rich get richer the poor get richer too. Rich people invest their money in businesses and ventures that overall lead to increased productivity and provide jobs to people. Rich people get richer when businesses become more successful and productive, and wages have a direct correlation to productivity. Poor people in Ireland are infinitely better off than poor people Egypt because the total level of wealth is higher and it is acquired in a relatively free system.
Now, when you take from one small group of people, the rich, in order to give to another group of people then you reduce the incentive on the rich to create more wealth. In addition you create a situation where the poor become dependent on the hand outs and are discouraged to figure out a way to better their lot. So while in the short term their is a benefit of wealth redistribution, the long term effects are extremely damaging.
The ultra liberal view is that gov't should merely regulate property. But we care rightly for society, and rich people, whilst utilising their initiative etc avail of various social capitals which are owned communally. Wealth after all, has no meanig without society. So, trickle down economics where a rising sea lifts all boats is not in my view a correct one. Sure, people should be able to keep most of what they make, and the tricky thing to decide is what is appropriate. This will be a reflection of what society will want to be, and this is essentially a moral view, not an economic one.
My argument was more down the line that in a free society people are free to pursue what ever goals and objectives they set themselves. I agree that a lot of our lives involves caring for others, and in my opinion this has greatly diminished in western societies. But these activities of caring for family, friends and neighbours are not a new phenomenon, they are ingrained in humans. And this caring side was not a problem before the introduction of wide spread welfare systems.
Historically I cannot see how this could be true. A family member who cannot earn money as a carer, a parent who cannot earn as a child-rearer, cannot be considered to be equal. Women are inordinately carers, and this would condemn 50% of the population to a permenant disadvantage.
... But someone that dedicates themselves to lets say a charitable service is doing so out of the "self interest" of having the satisfaction of having helped other people. Every human action is driven by the pursuit to be in a subjectively better situation than before. For some people it is the accumulation of consumer goods, and for other people it is helping others.
This cannot be correct. What motivates people to act are many, and may indeed be hidden from themselves/others. A human being uniquely can sacrifice themselves for a principle or a loved one. Self-interest cannot be the be all and end all. We just cannot say definitively. But what defines human nature uniquely is they can reflect and choose one action over another. How they do this is contentious. But a credible view is that we act on reasons provided to us by our identities. These identities are normative. A man who identifies himself as a Doctor respects confidentiality just because he so identifies himself, and thisacting from a normative identity forms the basis for human morality. *
I wouldn't include the poor in lacking "resources". I believe that people are far more resourceful than is made to be, especially when they have to pull themselves out of a bad situation. But you raise an important point about the equality of opportunity.
Some people are "victims" of brute luck. The disabled etc are perhaps short-changed in the lottery of life. Without a notion of equality they may not be able to pull themselves out of a bad situation.
There are countless examples, where especially the poor are at a disadvantage because of government intervention. Rich people and large businesses have the resources to overcome government rules and regulations. Poor people and small business do not have the same resources, which means that there is not a level playing field. Freedom to utilise your person and property without doing damage to others, and without the intervention by government levels the playing field for everyone.
I accept this may be somewhat true. But wealth is power, and power can corrupt as we well know. Undue influence of business and the rich (tax breaks etc) on the political system is a world-wide issue. The gov't duty and I would argue societies moral duty, is to regulate business such that it serves society, not engineer society to serve business & the rich.
* This idea cannot be sumised in a line or two. See Christine Korsgaard's "The Sources of Normativity"(2004) Cambridge University Press which aims to explain the origins of human morality.
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