1
2
3
Wealth and Want | |||||||
... because democracy alone is not enough to produce widely shared prosperity. | |||||||
Home | Essential Documents | Themes | All Documents | Authors | Glossary | Links | Contact Us |
Moral Insights
Nic Tideman: The Constitutional Conflict Between Protecting Expectations and Moral Evolution
Constitutions must be amendable, to allow for the
possibility of incorporating new moral insights into
them. This impinges on the protection of expectations,
including those regarded as property. Protection of
property rights is achieved by constitutional
restrictions on the ability of voters and legislators to
reduce the value of property by regulation, taxation or
expropriation. But such restrictions also prevent voters
and legislatures from reflecting new moral insights in
legislation, if those insights would reduce the value of
property. There have been times in the past when moral
development has compelled societies to change laws in
ways that reduced the value of property (e.g.,
elimination of slavery). We cannot guarantee that there
will be no future advances in our moral evolution that
would require similar changes in laws, reducing or
eliminating the value of what we now consider property.
Looking forward to the possibility of such moral
advances, we should design constitutions that permit
amendments to reflect new moral insights, while
prohibiting legislators (or voters in referenda) from
passing laws that redistribute in ways not explicitly
sanctioned by the constitution.
1. The Possibility of New Moral
Insights that Necessitate Redistribution
... Three hundred years ago virtually no one
questioned the propriety of slavery. Even John Locke,
that most articulate advocate of human freedom, invested
in slaves. But over the course of the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries, amid extreme controversy in some
times and places, slavery was nearly eliminated from the
world. With a bit of a lag, a consensus gradually evolved
among humanity that slavery was wrong, indeed that no
distinctions in civil rights based on race could be
justified.
Two hundred years ago almost no one
thought that women should be allowed to vote. Amid extreme
controversy in some times and places, they were granted
voting rights. Now virtually no one argues that women
should be denied any rights that men have. We have not yet
arrived at a consensus about what equality of the sexes
means, but we are near a consensus that we should strive
for it. ... Read the whole article Nic Tideman: The Political Economy of Moral Evolution
This paper argues that a liberal theory of the
resolution of disagreements about the requirements of
justice must include the possibility of secession. When
such a possibility is allowed, it can be predicted that
there will be changes not only in the character of
disputes about the requirements of justice, but also in
the patterns of taxes and public expenditures. There will
be a greater propensity for seeing the other side's point
of view in disputes about the requirements of justice,
and a greater tendency to support public activities by
efficient taxes on the beneficiaries of public
expenditures.
The paper begins with a discussion of the nature of moral truth, its relation to scientific truth, and the way in which moral knowledge grows. Next discussed is the difficulty of translating moral knowledge into social institutions, arising from the inevitability and impropriety of judging one's own cause. Ackerman's "neutral dialogue" is endorsed as the most acceptable way of dealing with this difficulty. But I suggest that in dialogues regarding the requirements of justice there should be an understanding that one possible outcome of the dialogue is failure to agree on mutually acceptable conditions for being part of the same society, leading to a parting of the ways. The conditions under which such a parting would occur constitute the most fundamental question of justice. I suggest that Ackerman's proposed condition of equal sharing of the providence of nature (Ackerman's initial manna) among all generations constitutes an appropriate basis for parting if agreement should be impossible.
I argue that such an understanding of the
possibility of secession would provide a better framework
for the growth of moral knowledge than when the
politically successful are able to preclude experiments
with alternative conceptions of justice. It would also
reduce opportunities for the politically adroit to
exploit the less adroit. If competition among societies
for citizens resulted from the possibility of secession,
the competitive equilibrium would include land value
taxation.... Read the
whole article
|
|
to email this page to a friend: right click, choose
"send"
|
||||||
Wealth and Want
|
www.wealthandwant.com
|
|||||
... because democracy alone hasn't yet led to a society
in which all can prosper
|