| As Aristotle noted, every art aims at some good, it
has some purpose. Morality is the master method by which you guide
all your choices and actions; it is your art of living. What is it
to be its aim? What is to be the purpose of morality?
The ancients identified the purpose of morality with the chief
good. Whatever chief good they proposed--happiness for Aristotle,
non-pain for Epicurus, apathy for the Stoics, heavenly afterlife for
Christians--they took that chief good to be the moral purpose. We
can suspect that they actually worked the problem back-to-front;
first they chose a moral purpose, and then they declared that
purpose to be the chief good. In any case, the ancients didn't
distinguish between the chief good and the purpose of morality.
But those who uphold life as the chief good must distinguish it
from the purpose of morality, for there are fatal objections to
taking life as the moral purpose. The concept of life is much too
broad for a moral purpose; it includes barest survival, and that is
much too paltry an aim. Furthermore, it wouldn't help us to make
important moral distinctions; after all, both good men and bad men
are alive.
We saw in The
Philosopher's Stone that life is the universal means and the
last end, and that life's most fundamental measure is leisure. Your
leisure is the means to all your ends and the end of all your means,
the very "stuff" of your life. Leisure is your chief good.
So is leisure the purpose of all moral action? No, not
directly. Even if we leave aside the error of those who define
leisure negatively, and who would therefore imagine that we were
exalting idleness to a moral ideal, leisure is subject to the same
objections as life. It doesn't allow us the distinctions we need;
good men and bad alike have 24 hours in their days. Nor is it clear
what it might mean to set leisure as a purpose; I defy anyone to be
so virtuous as to achieve more than 24 hours of leisure in his days,
or to be so inept as to achieve fewer!
With this as a statement of the difficulties of choosing the
fundamental moral purpose, let us proceed to solve them.
Re-state the problem
Begin by stating our purpose as platitudinously as we possibly
can: the good life.
This may seem a giant step backward, but it is the essential
clue; for it tells us to define our purpose as some species within
the genus "life." I.e., the good life will fall within some range of
measurement of life. Life is a certain kind of action, so we must
investigate the ways in which that kind of action can differ in
measure.
What are life's mathematical possibilities? The key to
enumerating them is a fact that we noted in
The Philosopher's Stone, namely that achieved ends are means to
further ends--that valuing is a feedback process. A feedback
process is one in which the result of the process is "fed back" to
the beginning of the process and causes future results, which are
then fed back again. And so on. Round and round and round goes the
causal chain--in a loop. Feedback loops have well understood
quantitative properties; we need only apply that knowledge to
valuing.
Feedback loops: negative and positive
Feedback loops with their circular causation may sound vaguely
magical when you first hear of them, but they hold no mysteries for
engineers, who design and use them routinely. The mathematics of
feedback loops can be as complex and convoluted as you wish (or as
some tricky application demands), but the essentials are simplicity
itself. There are two kinds of feedback loop, negative and
positive.
In a negative feedback loop an increase in the output feeds back
to cause a decrease in the output. Yes, you read that right;
negative feedback is arranged so that an increase in a
certain quantity causes a decrease in that very same
quantity. Once you overcome the common initial suspicion that that's
a contradiction, you may surmise that negative feedback loops tend
to reach a certain level of output and to return to that level when
disturbed. Good guess! Negative feedback loops are the heart of
automatic control systems, which have freed countless thousands of
men from such dreary tasks as continuously fiddling with a valve to
keep some flow rate constant. Your household thermostat uses a
negative feedback loop to keep your home at a cozy temperature.
In a positive feedback loop an increase in the output
feeds back to cause an increase in the output. So any
increase in output causes a sequence of further increases, and any
decrease causes a sequence of further decreases. If the system
changes it can have episodes of increase followed by episodes of
decrease, but so long as it remains a positive feedback loop it will
be increasing or decreasing at any given moment. The remaining
formal possibility--that it never changes in the slightest--is
merely a boundary between "blowing up" and "fading out." An
unchanging positive feedback loop is unstable; the least
change will push it to one side or the other. Thus, a positive
feedback loop will "run away;" its output will either blow up or
fade out. Under quite general conditions, it will run away
exponentially.
Valuing: positive feedback with exponentials
Achieved ends become means, so an increase of ends increases
one's ability to achieve ends; an organism and its values make up a
positive feedback loop. Valuing has only two stable regimes, one of
increase and one of decrease, as well as an unstable regime of no
change. We expect to find exponentials in any positive feedback
process; can we find them in valuing?
Yes! We saw in
The Leisure Theory
of Value that leisure is a measure of values, so you can
calculate their increase or decrease. This calculation, no matter
how complicated in detail, is straightforward in principle--a mere
job of work. From the perspective of valuing as a positive feedback
process, we can grasp the long term implications of such
calculations.
The following bit of algebra is mathematically trivial, even
downright pedantic, but please humor me. Its meaning for men's lives
is very far from trivial, and there are hosts of men
who will have trouble believing the conclusion even with the proof
before them; they need all the help they can get!
In each period in which one's values increase there is some
ratio, call it k (>1.0), between the means one expends and
the ends one reaps. In a sequence of n such periods there are
a sequence of n such ratios, call them k1,
k2, ..., kn; all of them greater
than 1.0. So, over the n periods one's values will increase
by a factor equal to the product of all these ks. One
of the ks will be the smallest, call it K (>1.0). So, over
the n periods, one's values will increase by more than
a factor of K to the power n, i.e., by more than a factor of
Kn.
What we have here, ladies and gentlemen, is a proof that if an
organism strings together a series of profitable periods (as
measured by leisure), its values will increase at least
exponentially with the passage of time. Valuing's regime of
increase is an exponential regime! The hard-won little
profits of life needn't merely add up like the steps of a
journey: they can compound like compound interest!
We can draw this stunning conclusion from trivial math only
because we have the use of a stunning philosophical discovery: a
perfectly general measure of value, a measure of all ends and
all means. The concept of leisure enables us to define the ratios
which are the nerve of the mathematical argument. After we've
grasped leisure's role as a measure of value, the arithmetic is
plain sailing!
The use of mathematics here is completely independent of
volition. It applies equally to deterministic organisms and to man.
The ratios, the ks, measure the outcome of an organism's
actions, and a man chooses his actions. The ks do not
determine a man's actions: his choices determine the ks.
The exponential possibilities of human valuing are open to man's
choice.
Living, dying ... or thriving?
We can easily identify the three regimes of valuing in the
organisms around us; they are so common that we have words for them,
even if their moral significance has been overlooked.
Valuing's unstable regime of no change is what we call "living,"
in the sense of merely living, barely living, just getting by or
rubbing along. Less kindly terms for this regime include stuck in a
rat race, in a rut, on a treadmill--and stagnating.
Valuing's regime of decrease is what we call dying. This sense of
dying is broader than the physiological sense which is limited to
the last few days or weeks of life. In this broader sense, some
organisms spend much of their lives dying. But even physiologically,
dying fits the pattern of exponential decline to a tee. As each
organ weakens, its diminished action undermines the actions of other
organs, which undermined actions feed back to a further weakening of
the first organ. There is no lack of near-synonyms which refer to
this regime: decline, decay, corruption, etc.
Valuing's regime of increase has not gone unnoticed. It is
expressed by such terms as getting ahead, flourishing,
progressing--thriving. I adopt "thriving" to name the exponential
increase of an individual's values.
To thrive is to have one's values--and thus one's power to win
values--burgeon exponentially.
Pick
one!
So the good life--the purpose of all moral action--must be
either:
- the stagnating life, or
- the dying life, or
- the thriving life.
These alternatives are mutually exclusive and jointly exhaustive;
at every moment of your life you must have one of them and you can't
have more than one. This is the most important multiple choice exam
of your life. So pick one!
Here's a hint. The stagnating life is impossible as a way
of life; stagnation is unstable. To pick stagnation is actually to
pick either dying or thriving--and to abandon the choice between
them to chance. Try again!
Here's another hint. If you pick the dying life, all your
problems are over. You will need no morality whatever! Just sit
still in one place, refrain from all action, and you'll have
achieved your purpose. But if you do nevertheless seek moral advice,
you will find it easy to come by--in the form of helpful suggestions
involving ropes, knives, poisons, high places and deep waters. Bye
bye-ee!
Did you pass the exam? The right answer is that the good life
is the thriving life. And so ....
Thriving is the purpose of morality. A thriving man's values grow
exponentially; so his life gets better and better--and it gets
better faster and faster! Thriving is the happiness of
man; you gotta love thriving! The distilled essence of all
moral advice is contained in a single word: Thrive!
And now we see in what sense leisure is the moral purpose. You
can't win more hours in your days, but you can win values
which will yield you more leisure than they cost; you can profit.
It is only by profiting that you can invoke exponentials in your
valuing. Thriving implies profit, as measured by leisure, but
in the form of other values. To set leisure as a purpose is
to set leisure profits as a purpose.
Through trade, each man's thriving helps other men to thrive.
More positive feedback! Thriving implies progress; a society
of thriving men is an exponentially progressing society.
The fundamental right is the right to thrive.
Wasn't that easy?
Refutation by action
But what of those who oppose a morality of thriving? Not everyone
welcomes human thriving; it has enemies. Plato declared that
true philosophers make dying their profession. Plato has been
echoed by a long line of mini-Platonists right down to today's
Greens who inveigh against human "growth." Aren't they a threat?
No, they're not much of a threat. Thriving is no fragile flower;
it's quite capable of defending itself. It is a big strong ideal,
and was born fully armed. It answers its enemies not only by the
arguments of its theorists, but above all by the actions of men
who live it! They defeat its enemies by the costless tactic of
out-thriving them and reducing them to irrelevance. The
enemies of thriving are refuted by action. (You may recognize
this as Ayn Rand's principle that evil is impotent, proved in a
brand new way.)
The code of thriving may lose some battles, but it wins every
war; time is ever on its side. This is no pious wish; it is a
theorem. Those who follow ideals opposed to thriving do not
thrive; their choice of ideal condemns them to decline and
decay, to continually diminishing means. Thriving men enjoy
exponentially growing means; that's what thriving is! Means
are power. Who thrives, wins! Who thrives faster, wins
sooner! Enemies of thriving regard this as unfair.
Heheheh!
Moralists through the ages have lamented that the wicked thrive
and that good men are cast down. They had no right to that lament,
for they taught codes that were aimed at everything under the sun
but thriving, or at supernatural figments, or even at nothing
whatever. Men who follow such codes disperse their efforts; they
squander their means. It's no surprise that they fail to thrive, nor
that others surpass them. The fault lies with the codes; they
produce men who may be good after a fashion, but who are not good
enough.
Good guys always win, provided that they are good enough
by the only code that counts, the code of thriving, the only system
of morality that's on the leisure standard. The code of thriving
implies radical optimism.
"Patent"
claim
There is something radically new about this concept of the good
life. The concept of thriving is independent of man! It is
independent of consciousness! This is new, and I claim it.
All previous attempts to define the good life have brought in
considerations specific to man, usually reason. Thriving, however,
is vastly broader; it applies to all living things, to living
things qua living things. A microbe, no less than a man, may
die, stagnate or thrive. In ways specific to themselves, cats and
countesses alike may live the good life!
You may reasonably ask, "So what? We are men after all,
and we thrive or die by our use or misuse of reason." That is
perfectly true, but to express it you had to use the concepts of
thriving and dying. First things first; beware the fallacy of the
stolen concept!
The principle at stake here is that of proving each thing at its
right level of abstraction, of attributing things to their
precise causes. Man has the capacity of a good life or an ill
one--of thriving or dying--not because he is a man, nor because he
is rational, nor yet because he is an animal; but because he is
alive. To attribute this capacity to any of those narrower
causes is therefore false, and therefore it cannot be proved
from them. This helps to explain the futility of the debates that
have swirled around the question of the good life.
So, is reason to be despised as of no account in a morality of
thriving? Not hardly! The essential role of reason in man's thriving
is beyond the scope of this essay, but here's a hint: rationality is
thrifty thinking.
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