lunedì 21 marzo 2016

5 Consequentialism and Fairness - The Problem of Political Authority: An Examination of the Right to Coerce and the Duty to Obey by Michael Huemer

5 Consequentialism and Fairness - The Problem of Political Authority: An Examination of the Right to Coerce and the Duty to Obey by Michael Huemer - sovranitàconfutata bimbocheannega aiutoridondante testkantianoconfutato ilcomandantepazzodellanave legislatorecriminogeno ilproblemadelleremita legittimitàecontenuti supremaziaconfutata

5 Consequentialism and FairnessRead more at location 2425
Note: l argomento c. è il più semplice x giustificare il dovere all obbedienza la metafora della barca che imbarca acqua 3 beni: crimine coordinamento difesa tesi: anche assumendo l esistenza di beni pubblici da ciò nn deriva alcun dovere tesi c.: poichè lo stato fornisce molti beni a basso costo obbedire alle sue leggi è dovrroso un certo livello di disobbediaenza può far collassare lo stato ma lontani da quel livello la disobbediaenza nn ha conseguenze sulla tenuta complessiva dello stato... quindi in casi del genere nn esiste un dovere all'obbedienza e l'universale kantiano? 1 ma qs nn è un prcetto consequenzialista bensì un consequenzialismo delle regole (c.r.). Come teoria c.r. traballa in molti casi è assurda: ho promesso a mio padre di fare il rag. ma e tutti facessero il rag? e se la regola fosse + generale tipo "fai la professione che + ti aggrada"? a qs punto anche la regola di chi disubbidisce potrebbe essere generalizzata ad hoc quando l u. delle regole vale e quando no? domanda difficile che fa ripiegare verso il concetto di equità: le regole si applicano x impedire comportamenti iniqui e solo x quelli. hart, rawls... confutati u. e u.regole il c. ripiega sul concetto di equità. l equità tralascia le questioni di legittimità x concentrarsi sul dovere di obbedire. in qs. modo si aggirano le analogie più imbarazzanti: io ho il diritto di diventare ragioniere ma ho il dovere di ubbidire alla legge? definizione di correttezza: esempio della barca che affonda e dei passeggeri che svuotano acqua: il tuo contributo è inutile ma dovuto x correttezza... anche obbedire alla legge è quindi un comportamento corretto anche se disubbidire nn creerebbe problemi seri di coordinamento ma se ti chiedono di "svuotare" e di pregare poseidone sei obbligato anche all' inutile preghiera? sei obbligato ad obbedire a leggi inutili se nn dannose? come minimo c è un concorso di colpa dello stato che le ha fatte! conclusione preliminare: nn si possono difendere contemporaneamente la legittimità dello stato e l'obbedienza del cittadino. @@@@ se è un problema vedere l obbligo di partecipare all inutile preghiera è decisamente difficile giustificare l o. politica a partecipare a progetti dannosi (indigeni anarchici eremiti pacifisti...)... chi si oppone sincrramente nn è un oportunista se sally ritiene che pregare jehova possa offendere cthulu è ugualmente doveroso x lei unirsi alla preghiera... terzo problema: esistono alternative più efficienti all obbedienza? di sicuro sì: givewell presenta una lista di onlus x efficienza l argomento c. è il più usato x giustificare la legittimità dei governi: forzare le persone al fine di evitare gravi danni è legityimo. se mio figlio sta morendo posso anche rubare una macchina al fine di condurlo all ospedale. nota: gli esempi fattibili sono molti ma tutti specifii e ben costruiti: devo avere un piano corretto ed efficiente x essere giustif. nell uso della forza. se mio figlio sta male nn ho il diritto di uccidere tuo figlio come sacrificio umano al buon dio. Questo è un problema xchè il governo pretende di averr un diritto generico e sstratto. il governo nn solo pretende legittimità ma pretende anche il monopolio della forza xchè? sulla barca ci sono pocky e gamby il fatto che picky agisca x primo nn gli dà alcun monopolio sui casi che segupno e che eventualmente giustificano un ontervento violento. esempio: se lo stato nn fornisce sicurezza xchè mai i privati nn potrebbero farlo? Edit
Note: 5@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@@ Edit
5.1.1   The structure of consequentialist arguments for political obligationRead more at location 2427
The simplest arguments for political authority are consequentialist ones.Read more at location 2428
Note: SEMPLICITÀ Edit
ascribe moral weight to the goodness or badness of an action’s consequencesRead more at location 2429
Note: LA BASE Edit
These arguments proceed in two stages. First, one argues that there are great values that are secured by governmentRead more at location 2431
Note: I DUE PASSI Edit
Second, one argues that this fact imposes on individuals an obligation to obeyRead more at location 2432
(a) we have a duty to promote the values addressed in the first stage of the argument or at least not to undermine them, and (b) obedience to the law is the best way of promoting those values and disobedience is a way of undermining them.Read more at location 2433
Note: DUE PASSI Edit
5.1.2   The benefits of governmentRead more at location 2435
The first major good ascribed to government is that of protection from crimes committed by individuals against other individuals,Read more at location 2436
Note: SICUREZZA Edit
Those who are most pessimistic about human nature fear that society would be reduced to a barbaric state of constant war of everyone against everyone.Read more at location 2440
Note: HOBBES Edit
The second major benefit ascribed to government is the provision of a detailed, precise, and public set of rules of social conduct that apply uniformly across society.Read more at location 2444
Note: IL BENE DELLA LEGGE Edit
The third salient benefit provided by government is that of military defense.Read more at location 2453
Note: ALTRO BENE: LA DIFESA MILITARE Edit
In Part II of this book, I challenge the widespread assumption that government is needed to provide these benefits. Nevertheless, in the present chapter I shall grant that assumption for the sake of argument. I contend that, even with this concession, one cannot derive political authority as commonly understood.Read more at location 2456
Note: RINVIO DELLA CRITICA A QS IPOTESI CHE ORA SI ASSUMONO DATE Edit
5.1.3   The duty to do goodRead more at location 2459
Take the case in which you see a child drowning in a shallow pond: you could easily wade in and save the child, though this would entail getting your clothes muddy and missing a class.Read more at location 2464
Note: IL CASO DEL BIMBO CHE ANNEGA Edit
if the child were drowning in the ocean and you had to assume a significant risk to your own life to save the child, then you would not be obligated to do so.Read more at location 2466
Note: UN SALVATAGGIO RISCHIOSO È DOVUTO? Edit
5.1.4   The problem of individual redundancyRead more at location 2477
many laws are routinely flouted without the government’s collapsing as a result. Nor is it true of any individual that that individual’s obedience is required for the government to provide the benefits that it provides.Read more at location 2479
Note: DISUBBIDIRE NN DISTRUGGE I GOVRRNI Edit
Of course, there are some laws that you should obey for independent moral reasons. For instance, you should not rob other people.Read more at location 2483
Note: DISTINGUI POLITICA E MORALE Edit
This is not an example of a political obligation; it is simply an example of a general moral obligationRead more at location 2484
To defend political obligation, one must argue that there is a content-independent obligation to obey the law because it is the lawRead more at location 2486
Return to the case of the child drowning in the shallow pond (Section 5.1.3). But this time, suppose that there are three other people nearby ready to save the child. They do not need help; there is no danger that the child will drown or sufferRead more at location 2488
Note: BAMBINO CHE ANNEGA. TRE VICINI CORAGGIOSI Edit
The case of a citizen deciding whether to obey the law is more analogous to this last versionRead more at location 2493
Note: È QS LA GIUSTA ANALOGIA Edit
there are already more than enough people obeyingRead more at location 2495
your own obedience is just as redundant as an extra rescuer jumping into the pond when there are already three rescuers wading out to save the child.Read more at location 2496
Note: AIUTO RIDONDANTE Edit
5.2   Rule consequentialismRead more at location 2497
Note: UTILITARISMO DELLE REGOLE Edit
the challenge: ‘What if everybody did that?’Read more at location 2499
Note: TEST KANTIANO Edit
It does not seem to be a simple consequentialist appealRead more at location 2501
This idea is closely related to that of rule consequentialism in ethics. Rule consequentialism holds that, rather than always choosing the particular action that will produce the best consequences given the present circumstances, one should act according to general rules,Read more at location 2503
Take the case of a newly planted lawn on a university campus. Students and professors are tempted to take short cuts across the lawn while walking from building to building. One person cutting across the lawn will have no noticeable effect. But if everybody does it, the pristine lawn will be marredRead more at location 2507
Note: ANALOGIA DEL PRATO CALPESTATO Edit
But in other cases, the principle seems absurd. Suppose I decide to become a professional philosopher. This seems permissible. But what if everybody did this?Read more at location 2512
Note: ASSURDITÀ DEL TEST KANTIANO IN MOLTI CASI Edit
Perhaps when I decide to become a philosopher, I am not acting on the rule ‘Be a philosopher’ but on some more complex rule, such as ‘Be a philosopher, provided that there are not already far too many philosophers’Read more at location 2517
‘Choose the profession best suited to you,Read more at location 2518
‘Break the law when what the law commands is not independently morally required, provided that there are not too many people breaking the law’Read more at location 2522
5.3   FairnessRead more at location 2527
Note: TEORIE DELL EQUITÀ Edit
5.3.1   The fairness theory of political obligationRead more at location 2528
to disobey is unfair to other members of one’s society, who generally obey.Read more at location 2529
Note: TESI DELL EQUITÀ Edit
The argument is not a consequentialist one – the claim is not that one’s disobedience will cause harmful consequences.Read more at location 2531
Note: USCIAMO DAL CONSEGUENZIALISMO Edit
Contrast the following scenario. You are in a lifeboat with several other people. You are caught in a storm, and the boat is taking on water, which needs to be bailed out. Other passengers take up containers and start bailing. The other passengers’ efforts are clearly sufficient to keep the boat afloat; thus, no large negative consequences will result if you refuse to bail. Nevertheless, it seems obvious that you should help bail water. Intuitively,Read more at location 2540
Note: ANALOGIA DELLA BARCA. ESISTE UN DOVERE DI REMARE? Edit
it would be unfair to let the others do all the work.Read more at location 2544
Advocates of the Fair Play Account argue that to disobey the law is to treat other members of one’s society unfairly.Read more at location 2558
5.3.2   Obedience as the cost of political goodsRead more at location 2564
suppose that one of the other bailers tells you to go and make him a sandwich. This you are not morally required to do.Read more at location 2566
Note: DEVO FARE UN PANINO AI SALVATORI? Edit
How, then, is the notion of fairness supposed to generate political obligations? The argument is that, in this particular case, obedience to the law constitutes sharing the cost of providing the benefits of the cooperative scheme.Read more at location 2568
Note: FIN DOVE DEVE SPINGERSI L OBBEDIENZA Edit
a closer analogy would be as follows. The lifeboat is taking on water. The passengers gather and discuss what to do about the problem.Read more at location 2596
Note: L EQUIPAGGIO ELEGGE ROBERT IL PAZZO Edit
A majority (not including you) want Bob to devise a solution. Bob thinks for a minute, then announces the following plan:Read more at location 2597
All passengers shall start bailing water out of the boat;Read more at location 2598
pray to PoseidonRead more at location 2599
flagellate themselvesRead more at location 2600
pay $50 to Sally,Read more at location 2601
You know that item (i) is useful, item (ii) is useless, and items (iii) and (iv) are harmful to most passengers.Read more at location 2602
If you refuse to pray, self-flagellate, or pay Sally, do you thereby act wrongly?Read more at location 2603
Do you treat the other passengers unfairly?Read more at location 2604
One must examine the content of a particular law to determine whether the behavior it enjoins genuinely contributes to the provision of political goodsRead more at location 2609
Note: VALIARE LE LEGGI UNA A UNA Edit
disobedience risks bringing down the government and all social order. We have criticized this sort of claim above (Section 5.1.4). But if it were true, it would do as much to undermine content-independent political legitimacyRead more at location 2612
Note: IL CASO DELLA LEGITTIMAZIONE INDIPENDENTE DAI CONTENUTI Edit
Presumably, if individuals are obligated to help maintain social order, the state is similarly obligated. If disobedience to any law risks causing a collapse of social order, then the state, in making laws that are not necessary to maintaining social order and that are likely to be widely disobeyed, is itself threatening social orderRead more at location 2614
Note: L OBBLIGO SIMMETRICO DEL LEGISLATORE CRIMINOGENO Edit
5.3.3   Political obligation for dissentersRead more at location 2621
A second problemRead more at location 2621
Note: IL PROBLEMA DELL EREMITA Edit
individuals who feel they do not need the state; for example, hermits living in the wilderness or indigenous peoples who would prefer that European colonists had never arrived on their continent.Read more at location 2622
(anarchists).Read more at location 2624
And it includes people who oppose specific government programsRead more at location 2625
pacifistsRead more at location 2626
it is also difficult to account for an obligation to assist in projects to which one is sincerely opposed,Read more at location 2628
suppose that the other passengers on the lifeboat believe that praying to Jehovah will assist themRead more at location 2629
Note: PREGARE IN BARCA Edit
Sally believes that praying to Jehovah will more likely be harmful, because it will offend Cthulhu. She therefore opposes the other passengers’ plan. In this situation, would it be unfair of Sally to refuse to pray to Jehovah?Read more at location 2631
in many cases, their view, whether correct or incorrect, is perfectly reasonable. I should think this is the case in regard to those who oppose the U.S. presence in Afghanistan, drug prohibition, immigration restrictions, and several other controversial laws or governmental projects.Read more at location 2641
Note: LE CONTROVERSIE RAGIONEVOLI ABBONDANO Edit
If one reasonably regards a project as unjust or immoral, one is hardly free riding,Read more at location 2644
Note: OPPORTUNISMO E DISSENSO Edit
5.3.4   Particularity and the question of alternative goodsRead more at location 2647
obeying the law often interferes with doing more important things. For instance, suppose you have the opportunity to safely evade $1,000 worth of legally prescribed taxes. It would perhaps be wrong to evade the taxes to spend the money on a new television. It would, however, be permissible to evade the taxes to use the money in a more socially valuable way than giving it to the government.Read more at location 2649
Note: DIRITTO AD EVADERE Edit
the marginal social benefit of a dollar given to any of a variety of extremely effective private charities.17 In this case, it is not wrong to evade one’s taxes to send the money to charity;Read more at location 2653
Note: DARE AL PIÙ EFFECIENTE ANZICHÈ ALLO STATO Edit
duress excuses the payment of taxes, but it does not render it praiseworthyRead more at location 2656
5.4   The problem of legitimacyRead more at location 2657
Note: LA LEGITTIMITÀ Edit
5.4.1   A consequentialist account of legitimacyRead more at location 2658
suppose you are at a board meeting at which you and the other members are discussing how to improve your company’s sales. You know that the best way to do this is to hire the Sneaku Ad Agency. Your plan will be morally unobjectionable and highly beneficial to the company. Nevertheless, the other members are not convinced. So you pull out your handgun and order them to vote for your proposal.Read more at location 2660
Note: ANALOGIA DEL MANAGER CON LA PISTOLA Edit
similar behavior can be justified in emergency circumstances.Read more at location 2664
Note: EMERGENZA Edit
Christopher Wellman offers an example with a similar lesson.18 Amy has a medical emergency and needs to be taken to the hospital immediately. Beth is aware of this but has no vehicle with which to transport Amy. So she temporarily steals Cathy’s carRead more at location 2669
it is permissible to coerce a person or violate a person’s property rights, provided that doing so is necessary to prevent something much worseRead more at location 2673
Thus, perhaps the state is justified in coercing people and seizing people’s property through taxation, because doing so is necessary to prevent a virtual collapse of society.Read more at location 2674
Note: EMERGENZA: COLLASSO SOCIALE Edit
5.4.2   Comprehensiveness and content-independenceRead more at location 2678
Note: FORMALISMI Edit
In the version of the lifeboat scenario discussed in Section 5.4.1, you are entitled to use coercion to save everyone on the boat. But this entitlement is neither comprehensive nor content-independent. Your entitlement to coerce is highly specific and content-dependent: it depends upon your having a correct (or at least well-justified) plan for saving the boat,Read more at location 2679
Note: ANALOGIA DELLA BARCA: IL DIRITTO ALLA VIOLENZA DIPENDE SEMPRE DAI CONTENUTI Edit
You may not coerce others to induce harmful or useless behaviorsRead more at location 2683
entitlement is highly content-specific:Read more at location 2687
How many governmental activities might be considered legitimate on this basis?Read more at location 2697
Note: COSA RESTA DELLA LEGITTIMITÀ POLITICA? Edit
laws against murder, theft, and fraud.Read more at location 2700
Policies designed to provide public goods,Read more at location 2700
Let us extend the story of the lifeboat a little further.Read more at location 2720
Note: L EROE SALVATORE SI OCCUPA DELLA DIETA Edit
You have forced the other passengers to bail water out of the boat, thus saving it from sinking. While you have your gun out, you decide you might as well accomplish a few other desirable goals. You see a passenger eating potato chips, which will elevate his risk of heart disease.Read more at location 2720
All of these actions are indefensible.Read more at location 2728
This is a problem because the state’s authority is generally held to be comprehensive and content-independent. On a very strict reading of the comprehensiveness and content-independence conditions, the existence of just a few laws that the state is not entitled to make would preclude the state’s having genuine authority.Read more at location 2735
Note: LA SOVRANITÀ È ILLUSORIA Edit
I think the state does not truly have legitimate authority.Read more at location 2741
5.4.3   SupremacyRead more at location 2742
Note: NESSUNO ALL INFUORI DELLO STATO Edit
The state’s authority is also supposed to be supreme, in the sense that no one else has the right to coerceRead more at location 2742
This, too, is difficult to account for. Modifying the lifeboat scenario once again, suppose that on the boat there are two armed passengers, Gumby and Pokey,Read more at location 2744
Note: IN BARCA: PERCHÈ SE LO DICE TIZIO E NN SE LO DICE CAIO Edit
Gumby is quicker to act:Read more at location 2747
does Gumby acquire some sort of supremacy?Read more at location 2748
No, he does not.Read more at location 2748
It seems, then, that the state does not, on consequentialist grounds, have supreme authority.Read more at location 2758
if the state fails to provide adequate protection from crime, there is no obvious reason why private agents may not provide security usingRead more at location 2760
So there is no clear sense in which the state has supreme authority;Read more at location 2776
5.5   ConclusionRead more at location 2779
Consequentialist and fairness-based arguments come closest to justifying political authority. Nevertheless, they cannot ground content-independent, comprehensive, or supreme authority for the state.Read more at location 2780
No one has the right to coercively enforce counterproductive or useless policies