At the end... "Sadly, within a century, the idea of conscience dissolved.
Capitalism was no longer bound by its dictates."

 

It was a bit over a century ago that the Sherman Antitrust Act and the
Clayton Act were enacted to break up the great trusts like the Standard Oil
Trust and US Steel (Andrew Carnegie and JP Morgan).  The monopolists didn't
show a lot of conscience.  That was up to the trust busters.

 

Chris

 

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Dr. Ernie Prabhakar
Sent: Monday, July 21, 2014 12:19 PM
To: Centroids Discussions
Subject: [RC] Steering a Middle Course (Pt.3)

 

According to two editors at the Economist, there have been three revolutions
in Western government. They believe we're due for a fourth. Similarly, there
have been three revolutions in economics since the late 19th century. Are we
due for a fourth?

 





http://www.doggieheadtilt.com/steering-a-middle-course-pt-3/


Steering a Middle Course (Pt.3)


According to two editors at the Economist, there have been three revolutions
in Western government. They believe we're due for a fourth. Similarly, there
have been three revolutions in economics since the late 19th century. Are we
due for a fourth?

John Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge, editors at the Economist, have
authored a new book, The Fourth Revolution: The Global Race to Reinvent the
State. They cite three revolutions in modern world governments - the
nation-state, "Liberal State," and, most recently, the bloated welfare
state.1 They say it's time for a fourth.

There have likewise been three revolutions in economics. Crony and collusive
capitalism are the first two. They try to expand the domain of free choice.
The third, collectivism, reacts against both by expanding the domain of law.
All three encroach on Lord Moulton's middle course, however. That's why many
are calling for a fourth revolution, calling for conscious, inclusive,
collaborative, and creative capitalism. And while each makes some good
points, the better model is conscientious capitalism. It aligns with human
nature, a lesson the Greeks learned long ago.

The Greeks had "a deep respect for the passions of the mind," writes Michael
Novak in The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism.2 Aristotle believed "the
Good," fully seen through inquiry and reason, yields a virtuous mind.
Virtuous minds yield virtuous people. But this is the Enlightenment error -
think right; act right. Vestiges of this are still visible in the
"mindfulness" movement. It says "being mindful" of goodness yields goodness.
But this assumes our minds work in rational ways. Dan Ariely debunks this. 

In his 2008 book, Predictably Irrational, Ariely shows how our
decision-making in buying things differs from academic models. Academicians
act like Greeks. They believe data drives behavior. It doesn't. Desire does.
Ariely cites findings from neuroscience indicating we make decisions based
more on our heart's desires than data in our head. Our minds are
fundamentally not rational, explaining why "mindfulness" is inadequate.

To be fair, the Greeks didn't know about neuroscience. They instead learned
the hard lesson of how 'seeing the Good' didn't create good people. As
society prospered, the wealthy - those most mindful of economic
opportunities - acted like crony capitalists. Income inequities widened.
Have-nots looked to the law as a corrective. As unbridled liberty and unduly
burdensome law increased, the middle course shrank. "It was left to
Christian thinkers," writes Novak, "especially to St. Paul, St. Augustine,
and St. Thomas Aquinas, the task of correcting the unfinished psychology of
the Greeks."

The correction was conscience. The Early Church was steeped in the Old
Testament where conscience is described as the "heart" (the Hebrew language
uses body parts as metaphors for the immaterial realm).3 When the Bible says
"David's heart smote him" (I Sam. 24:5), it's telling us his conscience was
correcting him. David wasn't merely conscious of his sin; he responded
conscientiously by repenting and making restitution. Mindfulness is
inadequate. It requires a moral motor, conscience, to move us from
consciousness to conscientiousness. Conscientious individuals more often
repent and repudiate bad behavior. They're obedient to the unenforceable.

Conscientious people recognize the human capacity for rationalizing our
failings (Jer.17:8-9). They know the mind plays all sorts of tricks on us.
They believe self-awareness, or conscientiousness, requires outside
assessments. Conscientious people rely on 360 reviews, avoiding today's
popular self-assessments that assume individuals can clearly assess their
strengths and weaknesses. They can't, which is how the church completed the
unfinished psychology of the Greeks. It introduced conscience.

This is why Western culture flourished for a millennium. When a society's
institutions operate conscientiously, they steer a middle course. They
exhibit the courage to do good - no matter what the cost. "Conscience is an
active combining of knowledge with the moral courage to do the good," wrote
Thomas Aquinas. Martin Luther steered this middle course, standing at the
Diet of Worms and uttering these immortal words: "My conscience is captive
to the Word of God, I cannot and will not recant anything, for to go against
conscience is neither right nor safe."

The founding fathers had much to say about conscience, tying it to a
virtuous society and free markets. James Madison wrote that when a nation
follows the "dictates of conscience," a free people remain free. Sadly,
within a century, the idea of conscience dissolved. Capitalism was no longer
bound by its dictates. That's where we pick up the story next week. 

Follow me on Twitter:  <http://twitter.com/Metzger_Mike> @Metzger_Mike 

_____________________
1 John Micklethwait & Adrian Wooldridge, The Fourth Revolution: The Global
Race to Reinvent the State (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014).
2 Michael Novak, The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism (New York: Simon &
Schuster, 1982).
3 Herant Katchadourian, Guilt: The Bite of Conscience (Palo Alto: Stanford
University Press, 2010), p. 143.





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