E
exnihilo
Guest
I don’t think pure capitalism assumes that profit is the sole purpose of economic transactions. Or if it does it does not preclude that people can have other reasons for transactions. Capitalism does not require that people only be motivated by economic considerations. It is really only the idea that unfettered markets produce the most material goods. And this is really an established fact. If one likes to have less material goods because they want to employ buggy whip makers that is a judgement that lies outside of strictly economic considerations. Capitalism as an ideology does not preclude that.The problem is the assumption in pure capitalism (without any moderating elements) that profit is the sole purpose of economic transactions and the limitless potencial for selfishly driven individualistic competition to the detriment of the common good and the welfare of others, that many capitalistic economies foster simply ipso facto as a result of the very nature of most forms of capitalism themselves, which share a common propensity of viewing economic issues solely in a materialistic, value-free manner without any government or higher intervention whatsoever and without any moral guidelines or foundations. Its like atheistic opinions of evolution: viewed as purely natural, cause-and-effect, balances and checks without a shred of a moral compass or guiding force from a higher authority. This is a form of idolatry, idolizing the marketplace and unfettered competition.
I’m a pure capitalist but I do not make my decisions based on selfishness, at least I hope not. A capitalist can pay his workers more than the market wage. There is nothing about capitalism that precludes that. There are plenty of examples of businessmen doing just that. So free markets really have nothing to do with pure, selfish individualism.Now, rigid state domination of the economy stifles initiative and enterprise. Communism thus is a miserable “cure” for the evils of capitalism (and I use it in the sense described by myself above) and is in fact a worser beast than the illness. However free-market capitalism is also inherently flawed. The pure pursuit of profit, without regard for consequences creates an unstable economic system. Capitalism, in most of its “purist” forms, exists by pure, selfish individualism.
What interests me is the theory, that must exist, that governments will seek the good of all. If men are selfish such that the free market will lead to nothing but selfish outcomes then how is it that men as political creatures will suddenly not be selfish? I simply don’t understand that. If men are selfish it seems to me that the selfish men will be just as much a part of the government. They will then inflict their selfishness on the people and since the people’s economic freedom has been inhibited, supposedly for the good of the group, they will have lost some means of resisting this selfishness. That seems far worse and harder to overcome