Charles,

Not exactly. I didn't say you equated consumption with usefulness. I said
you said what you said, which was that people (not you) use their
consumption as a gauge of their productivity. You are quite correct to say
that people who want us to work less (using the term "work" advisedly) have
to come to terms with the issue of what to do with our time. That precisely
describes the phase of my research at the current time.

If it would be any help, I could give you the answer in rather opaque
philosophical language right now. The simplest expression of it is "know
thyself", with the understanding that "knowing" is not a static achievement
but an uninteruptable striving. Or would it be too cryptic to say that we
"work" (in a very limited sense of the verb) too much because we are too
lazy, fearful, vain, servile, foolish, intoxicated to work in the fullest
sense joyfully and relentlessly? Employment is how we shirk these days and
the longer we "work" (that is, shirk), the less we accomplish.

None of this is new. Not even recent. I could play variations on the theme
from Shakespeare, Franklin, Carlyle or Dilbert. What is new, IMHO, is that
the iron cage that Weber spoke about has begun to crumble and that the
dominant political response to that crumbling has been to shore up the cage,
as if the cage was the very source of our prosperity instead of a doleful
companion of it. It is like a mill town pumping "eau de rotten-egg" into the
air after the pulp mill has closed to try to simulate the smell of success.
We end up with nothing but the smell, nothing but the iron cage. Nothing.

Bergson on "the moments of our life, of which we are the artisans."

"Each of them is a kind of creation. And just as the talent of the painter
is formed or deformed -- in any case, is modified -- under the very
influence of the works he produces, so each of our states, at the moment of
its issue, modifies our personality, being indeed the new form that we are
assuming. It is then right tot say that what we do depends on what we are;
but it is necessary to add also that we are, to a certain extent, what we
do, and that we are creating ourselves continually. This creation of the
self by self is the more complete, the more one reasons on what one does..."

The delicious irony here is that Bergson virtually paraphrases Benjamin
Franklin. Old time-is-money Ben. How does "creation of self by self" differ
from the "myth of the self-made man"? They differ only with regard to the
issue of calculation. Incipiently for Franklin but more so for his
followers, there is the notion of the balance sheet, accounting for the
progress of self improvement through an enlargement of what today we call
the "bottom line". It is at this point that Bergson diverges.

"For reason does not proceed in such matters as in geometry, where
impersonal premisses are given once and for all, and an impersonal
conclusion must perforce be drawn.  Here, on the contrary, the same reasons
may dictate to different persons, or to the same person at different
moments, acts profoundly different, although equally reasonable. The truth
is that they are not quite the same reasons, since the are not those of the
same person, nor of the same moment. That is why we cannot deal with them in
the abstract, from outside, as in geometry, nor solve for another the
problems by which he is faced in life. Each must solve them from within, on
his own account."

There seems to be a persistent anxiety about compelling people to work fewer
hours, as if current arrangements represent total freedom and the advocates
of shorter work time want to take away some of this freedom. Nothing could
be further from the truth.

Current legislation, policy, custom and relations of social dominance impose
and enforce long hours of work on many who don't want them, part-time work
on many who want to work full time, unemployment on many who want to work,
unsuitable work on many who have the training and talent to do something
more self-fulfilling and unacceptable working conditions on many who have no
choice. And right away, when someone raises the possibility of reducing the
hours of work, a hue and cry goes up about compelling people to do something
they don't want to do.

I suppose that abolishing slavery would compel some slaves to give up a way
of life that they wanted to hold onto. The argument strikes me as
disingenious, though, that slavery is "more free" because abolishing it
would entail some compulsion.

Charles Brass writes,

> I am most emphatically not equating consumption with usefulness.  I am,
> however, equating activity, productivity, production, celebration and many
> other time using activities with usefulness.  Which is the issue which
those
> who want us to work less have to come to terms with.  What will we do with
> our time which satisfies us and others?


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