So something's been bugging me lately about free market purists, namely the assumptions they make about the human organism. The basic idea is that human agents in a market, acting on their individual whims and desires, will act in a way that aggregates into a sustainable and adaptive economy that makes everyone's lives better. Right? Am I missing something?Okay, so here's my problem: Why are humans able to do that? I know we're rational, but we're not 100% rational, far from it. Consider high obesity rates in the US. People don't roll up to McDonalds thinking "Hey I really want to get fat and die of heart disease." they roll up thinking "Cheeseburger tastes gud take my money." Why is this? Because we evolved in an environment where fats and sugars are somewhat hard to come by, so our stomach and taste buds tell us to suck every last drop when we find it. Unfortunately, in the modern world, this isn't sustainable and is in fact dangerous.Now, our natural whims and desires are largely flawed when it comes to fucking feeding ourselves, our rationality fails us and we make short-sighted decisions with long-term detriments. But somehow I'm supposed to believe these whims and desires DO line up perfectly for allocating resources in a 7 billion person, post industrial, computerized, global economy? Cheesecake's been around since Ancient Rome, and we still aren't at all adapted to its presence and get fat as fuck when it's cheap and available. The aforementioned conditions are practically brand new to humans, having only existed for a few generations. Now, I didn't go to a Southern school, so I do know a bit about evolution, and I know that it takes a little more than a half-dozen generations for selection pressures to force adaptations. We seem to be pretty amateurish at this stuff, as simply changing the colors of a brand logo has been found to affect sales, we're clearly influenced by very trivial and irrelevant manipulations in our purchasing decisions.Every other species on Earth will eat its food supply into nothingness in the absence of predators, this is the primal version of the Tragedy of the Commons. So why are humans immune? Is a spark of rationality, even one competing with irrational instincts, lusts, emotions, religions, etc, sufficient for Capitalism to work? Did we somehow evolve, despite the absence of selection pressures, into a creature capable of managing its entire population based entirely on individual selfishness, even when that population scales to 7 billion people? Or did God put the divine spark for markets in us? tldr: Capitalists, where do you stand on evolution/creationism/ID and how does that relate to your belief in market infallibility?[Edited on January 18, 2012 at 1:12 PM. Reason : .]
1/18/2012 1:07:15 PM
1/18/2012 1:17:40 PM
^ To be fair, your opinion here would argue against free markets. I'm not saying that leads to another alternative, because any alternative could be worse. But you are no doubt arguing against a free market.
1/18/2012 1:32:32 PM
Don't offer an alternative summary of Capitalism or anything, aaronburro, wouldn't want anybody to think you have anything inside your ahead aside from rocks and semen.
1/18/2012 1:33:05 PM
rewinding a bit...
1/18/2012 2:27:18 PM
Maybe you're trolling but I want to make sure you at least understand that you're splitting hairs over a tertiary aspect of the argument I'm making. The main argument is that an individual's evolved desires and inclinations take time to adjust to a changing environment, and so it seems odd to me for Capitalists to be so certain that our individual desires and inclinations are attuned such that global Capitalism will work out despite a rapidly changing environment.If you seriously just want to debate cheesecake in particular maybe we can start another thread.And no, our taste buds are not just fine, otherwise we wouldn't be seeing obesity growing rapidly in almost all of the developed countries where sugary, fatty foods are widely available. It's pretty obvious that our inclinations for consumption are not attuned in a sustainable way to the availability of sugary and fatty foods.Edit: Because you're being really pedantic I'll head you off and point out that it's not really the taste buds that are maladapted so much as the shut-off mechanisms in our brain that regulate appetite.[Edited on January 18, 2012 at 2:56 PM. Reason : .]
1/18/2012 2:45:03 PM
1/18/2012 2:51:11 PM
1/18/2012 2:56:01 PM
Let's establish something first. I've tried to do this before and people have glossed over it, so there's no excuse in this thread.The free market: all voluntary transactions between individuals. Pollution is not included in "the free market". Theft, murder, and rape are not included in "the free market". When I talk about the free market, I mean exchanges of a good or a service in exchange for a good or a service. When I advocate free market capitalism, I am actually advocating a purely voluntarist society with no coercion. It is an ideal, something to work for, not something I think is likely to happen in our lifetime or maybe ever.The earliest governments were brutal, warlike, and despotic. Over time, we have formed better governments that embraced liberal values. We have worked away from authoritarianism and gotten closer to libertarianism/voluntarism in the modern era.
1/18/2012 3:01:53 PM
1/18/2012 3:02:06 PM
1/18/2012 3:11:28 PM
1/18/2012 3:45:40 PM
I certainly don't believe that the market is infallible, but attempts by governments and central banks to make corrections to the market has led us to this very precipitous position we are at now, where a seemingly innocuous event like a Greek default now threatens the Eurozone, and by extension the global economy.
1/18/2012 4:04:16 PM
^Link to the whole article: http://www.sovereignman.com/expat/the-final-countdown/
1/18/2012 4:32:14 PM
I always thought about it the other way. Human beings are irrational capricious self interested individuals, as such we need to design a system where-by we can minimize the damage this causes. Therefore, placing an irrational capricious self interested human being into a position of power over other human beings will only multiply the damage. Irrational human beings in a free market system suffer manageable environmental degradation, manageable suboptimal resource allocation, and various disasters on individual levels (bankruptcy, health failures, poverty, crime, etc). Meanwhile, irrational human beings in a top-down managed system suffer environmental collapse, disastrous resource allocation, and social wide disasters (stagnation, starvation, war, political extermination, totalitarianism, etc). Choose your poison.
1/18/2012 6:32:08 PM
I love how everyone who has come in here to disagree has essentially said the same thing: your basic premise is wrong. that's some damned fine stupidity there
1/18/2012 7:59:56 PM
1/18/2012 9:06:22 PM
Did the OP not answer his own question and didn't know it?There was never any sort of time constraints mentioned in any of his post. And as others rightly pointed out evolution takes a long time to happen. Is it not self evident that the hogs will be selected out and what we will be left with is a healthier (thus more productive for us all) population who also happens to eat less calories in total (thus making more room for more healthy of us)?Just as bad businesses (the fat people) can stay in business for quite a long time wasting resources (eating more food than they need), the market will eventually remove them from the gene pool.
1/18/2012 9:45:25 PM
1/18/2012 9:50:12 PM
1/18/2012 10:10:05 PM
1/18/2012 10:16:30 PM
1/18/2012 10:33:18 PM
1/18/2012 11:01:25 PM
1/19/2012 11:59:30 AM
1/20/2012 9:15:01 AM
1/20/2012 9:27:45 AM
Here Loneshark, great example of the government sitting back and letting individuals act on their "rational self interest" without collective oversight/self-reflection: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deforestation_in_HaitiAt the very least, you need a collective governing body to assess costs of an http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Externality like pollution and enforce appropriate taxes or fees in place of price controls.[Edited on January 20, 2012 at 9:40 AM. Reason : .]
1/20/2012 9:37:56 AM
1/20/2012 10:05:31 AM
1/20/2012 10:08:36 AM
1/20/2012 11:01:22 AM
1/20/2012 11:05:18 AM
some people argue regulation through deregulationIf, for instance, I didn't have assurances that products would correctly label how much trans fats they have, then I would sure as the sun shines look for an independent oversight company to give me accurate information. I would also pay them, directly or indirectly, to provide this service.
1/20/2012 11:09:10 AM
^
1/20/2012 11:09:33 AM
1/20/2012 11:33:38 AM
We've never been to Mars, but I wouldn't ever dream of saying we'll never go there.
1/20/2012 12:32:51 PM
massive difference.
1/20/2012 12:37:11 PM
Having only cherry picked a few of the posts in this thread, this seems relevant to the discussion.http://medicalxpress.com/news/2012-01-quebec-fast-food-ads-consumption-junk.html
1/20/2012 12:37:41 PM
^ this makes a good point. We would all be better off by banning advertising for junk food. Pretty simple. And the people who were advertised to (but aren't any more) won't miss it, no doubt.If I were a parent then I would prefer to have a TV that didn't show ads for fast food. So why hasn't the free market already used the method and fixed this problem? You don't want to see fast food ads? Fine, then just buy your TV and programming from companies who won't show them.Libertarians, tell me again why this hasn't worked.
1/20/2012 1:04:41 PM
Don't allow your kids to watch MSM if you don't want them to be manipulated by advertising.What is so hard about taking personal responsibility for what you and your children do?[Edited on January 20, 2012 at 1:12 PM. Reason : .]
1/20/2012 1:10:48 PM
1/20/2012 1:23:41 PM
^^^First, I'm going to need you to respond to my reply to your claim that moron made a strong argument. If you can back that up at all, I'd be interested in what you have to say.Second, I was explicitly clear about what the free market is in my first post in this thread. So, these questions of, "Why didn't the free market come up with perfect solutions?" are not warranted.I guess the irony, though, is that the free market has come up with solutions. DVR. Hulu and internet-based entertainment. Or, you know, have some self control.
1/20/2012 1:24:45 PM
1/20/2012 1:28:50 PM
How does that refute what I said? Knowledge and discipline are both products of environment. Even mental state (for instance, getting dumped by a girl, taking it poorly, and experiencing a downward spiral, eventually leading to unhealthy physical state) is influenced by environment.I've really already addressed this. Calorie rich foods are now cheaper and more available than ever before. This is the case in other countries, as well - countries that are not experiencing obesity to the same degree. It's easier to be obese here, yes. This does not discount the individual factors that cause people to be obese or normal weight, however. Yes, there are broader explanations for why obesity is on the rise. Shit, look no further than the food pyramid pushed by the U.S. government for years and years that emphasized bread as the food that should be consumed the most.[Edited on January 20, 2012 at 1:42 PM. Reason : ]
1/20/2012 1:33:24 PM
1/20/2012 2:15:23 PM
1/20/2012 2:48:37 PM
It's obvious that some controlled systems are function better. Design in the general sense is a replacement for evolution.The process where butterflies gained flight was evolution.The process where humans gained flight was design.The machine that the Wright brothers flew didn't have any particular prior use (a failed flying machine was just junk). The parts existed due to other uses (like bikes) and were re-purposed into a clumsy machine that was only recognized to have importance due to human comprehension.But there are really 2 arguments against command-and-control government1. It's ineffective at creating value2. It doesn't respect the autonomy of the individualsAn argument that uses #1 and not #2 isn't permanently defensible. It only works until someone invents a more efficient version of feudalism. I don't think that means we can't ever "design" a better government, or even economic system. In fact, our patent system is a designed system, IMO. It's not about inherent ownership rights to an idea, because why would they last for some arbitrary # of years? It's a system that exists to encourage people to invent - and create value. It's designed however (or should be) necessary to accomplish the goal.I think that #2 doesn't prohibit a controlled system, but if a controlled system exists, it should have opt-outs that exist in order to respect the autonomy of the individual.
1/20/2012 4:11:10 PM
1/20/2012 4:22:09 PM
1/20/2012 4:51:42 PM
1/21/2012 10:44:06 AM
1/21/2012 10:46:28 AM