Title: Politics and the Social Contract: Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau
1Politics and the Social Contract Hobbes, Locke,
Rousseau
Clark Wolf Director of Bioethics Iowa State
University jwcwolf_at_iastate.edu
2Argument for Analysis
- Either Ill stay on campus between classes, or
Ill go home. If I go home, my roommate will
distract me and I wont get my Philosophy reading
done. But if I stay on campus, I wont have
anyplace quiet to work, so I wont be able to get
my philosophy reading done. I guess I wont get
my reading done!
3Argument for Analysis
- 1) Either Ill stay on campus between classes,
or Ill go home. - 2) If I go home, my roommate will distract me
and I wont get my Philosophy reading done. - 3) But if I stay on campus, I wont have
anyplace quiet to work, so I wont be able to get
my philosophy reading done. - 4) I wont get my reading done!
4Dilemma
- 1) Either C or H
- 2) If H then D P
- 3) if C then W and P.
- 4) P
5Argument for Analysis
- If we arm campus police, then there will be more
guns on campus because the campus police will
bring them. But if we dont arm campus police,
then the criminals will bring more guns to
campus. So no matter what we do, there will be
more guns on campus. -
- If there are guns on campus, its better that
they be in the hands of the police than in the
hands of the criminals. So we should arm the
police.
6Argument for Analysis
- There can be no such thing as justice unless
there are institutions to punish people who break
their promises and contracts. Justice involves
the rational requirement that people should keep
their promises and abide by the contracts to
which they freely agree. But unless there are
public institutions that will punish people who
break promises and contracts, it is not rational
for people keep them. Since requirements of
justice must be requirements of reason
(rationality), it isnt just to keep contracts
where there is no punishment, its just
irrational and foolish.
7Argument for Analysis
- 1) Justice involves the rational requirement
that people should keep their promises and abide
by the contracts to which they freely agree. - 2) But unless there are public institutions that
will punish people who break promises and
contracts, it is not rational for people keep
them. - 3) Since requirements of justice must be
requirements of reason (rationality), it isnt
just to keep contracts where there is no
punishment, its just irrational and foolish. - 4) There can be no such thing as justice unless
there are institutions to punish people who break
their promises and contracts
8Argument for Analysis
- Terms like good and beautiful essentially
refer to the attitudes of the person who uses
them to say that something is beautiful is to
say that one likes looking at it to say that
something is good is to say that one appproves of
it. Since different people find different things
beautiful and good, such terms change their
meaning when they are used by different people.
But reasoning requires terms that have a stable
meaning proper reasoning cannot be done with
terms that have a different meaning for
different speakers. Ethics is the philosophy of
good, just as aesthetics is the philosophy of
beauty. It follows that there can be no
reasoning in ethics or aesthetics.
9Argument for Analysis
- 1) Ethics is the philosophy of good, just as
aesthetics is the philosophy of beauty. - 2) To say that something is beautiful is to say
that one likes looking at it to say that
something is good is to say that one approves of
it. - 3) Since different people find different things
beautiful and good, such terms change their
meaning when they are used by different people. - 4) Reasoning requires terms that have a stable
meaning - 5) Therefore, there can be no reasoning in
ethics or aesthetics.
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12- I. Hobbess Psychology and Method A. Some
Background on Hobbes B. Language, Reasoning,
and Knowledge Foundationalism and Definitions
C. Psychology. Is Hobbes a Psychological
Egoist? D. Perspectival Value... - II. Hobbes's State of Nature and the Foundations
of Civil Society A. Hobbes State of Nature B.
To the State of "Warre" C. Hobbes SON compared
with "The Prisoner's Dilemma" D. Natural Laws
and Natural Rights
13- Language and Knowledge Right Definitions and
the "Sticky twigs of language..." - "Seeing that truth consisteth in the right
ordering of names in our affirmations, a man that
seeketh precise truth had need to remember what
every name he uses stands for, and to place it
accordingly or else he will find himself
entangled in words, as a bird in lime twigs, the
more he struggles the more belimed. And therefore
in geometry, (which is the only science that it
hath pleased God hitherto to bestow on mankind)
men begin at settling the significations of their
words which settling of significations they call
definitions and place them in the beginning of
their reckoning." -Leviathan, Ch 4, p. 501.
14- Reason REASON... is nothing but reckoning (that
is, adding and subtracting) of the consequences
of general names agreed upon for the marking and
signifying of our thoughts. (Ch 5, p. 503)
15- Knowledge Hobbes is an Empiricist. Knowledge
comes from our senses. False and misleading
ideas we get are added by imagination and
"fancy." - Empiricism The theory that all knowledge comes
to us through the senses. - Insignificant Speech Literally meaningless noise
presented under the false guise of communication.
Hobbes believes that we become literally
incoherent when we are not careful about the
meanings of the terms we employ.
16- "The common sort of men seldom speak
insignificantly, and are therefore by those other
egregious persons counted idiots. But to be
assured their words are without any thing
correspondent to them in the mind, there would
need some examples which if any man require, let
him take a School-man into his hands and see if
he can translate any one chapter concerning any
difficult point, as the Trinity the Deity the
nature of Christ' transubstantiation free-will,
c. into any of the modern tongues, so as to be
able to make the same intelligible. (...) What is
the meaning of these words "The first cause does
not necessarily inflow anything into the second,
by force of the essential subordination of the
second causes, by which it may help it to work."
They are the translation of the title of the
sixth chapter of Suarez' first book, Of the
Concourse, Motion, and Help of God. When men
write whole volumes of such stuff, are they not
mad, or intent to make others so?" (Ch 8, end, p.
617)
17Hobbes on Philosophical Nonsense
- Philosophers are the worst, according to Hobbes
"And of men, those are of all most subject to
absurdity that profess philosophy. For it is
most true that Cicero saith of them somewhere
that there can be nothing so absurd but may be
found in the books of philosophers." (Ch 5p. 504)
- The Point Hobbes hopes to clear up earlier
philosophical messes by making language precise.
He hopes to do for politics, morals, and
knowledge, what Euclid did for Geometry.
18Hobbes on Psychology and Human Motivation
- Psychological Egoism All human actions are
(ultimately) selfish. - Ethical Egoism All right actions are selfish.
- Questions
- 1) Why would anyone believe these theories?
- 2) Are these two consistent with one another?
Why or why not?3) Is Hobbes a psychological
egoist? - 4) Is Hobbes an ethical egoist?
19POWER AND DEATH THE BASIC HOBBESIAN MOTIVES
- "I put for a general inclination of all mankind,
a perpetual and restless desire for power after
power, that ceaseth only in death. And the cause
of this is not always that a man hopes for a more
intensive delight than he has already attained
to or that he cannot be content with a moderate
power but because he cannot assure the power and
means to live well, which he hath present,
without the acquisition of more. And from hence
it is that Kings, whose power is greatest, turn
their endeavours to the assuring it at home by
laws or abroad by wars and when that is done,
there succeedeth a new desire in some of fame
from new conquest in others, of ease and sensual
pleasure in others, of admiration, or being
flattered for excellence in some art, or other
ability of the mind." (Ch 11 p. 523)
20Hobbesian Psychology Egoism?
- IS HOBBES A PSYCHOLOGICAL EGOIST?
- For He does seem to define our words in the
language of self-interest... - Against Not all of our interests may be
self-regarding. When we act on other-regarding
interests, we're not egoists. In MAN AND STATE
Hobbes makes it clear that he is not a
psychological egoist. (Good thing too, since no
reputable psychologist now regards psychological
egoism as a plausible theory of human
motivation.)
21Value
- Value and "Good"
- "Whatsoever is the object of any man's appetite
or desire, that it is which he for his part
calleth good and the object of his hate and
aversion, evil and of his contempt vile and
inconsiderable. For these words of good, evil,
and contemptible, are ever used with relation to
the person that useth them there being nothing
simply and absolutely so nor any common rule of
good and evil, to be taken from the nature of
objects themselves but from the person of the
man. (...)" (Ch 6, p. 506)
22Value Realism and Value Subjectivism
- CompareHamlet "...there's nothing good or bad
but thinking makes it so." - Epictetus Things are not good or bad in
themselves, but only in relation to our desires
and aversions. So it's 'bad' to want something
and not get it, or to be averse to something and
get it. But, Epictetus will go on, if you train
yourself not to want or be averse to the wrong
things, then nothing will be good or bad for
you. - BUT BY CONTRAST Compare Plato on "Good." What is
Plato's reason for thinking that "good" can be a
non-subjective term? Does Plato's reason apply to
Hobbes' theory?
23Terms of "inconstant signification" and
reasoning a source of "insignificant speech"
- "The names of such things as affect us, that is,
which please and displease us because all men be
not alike affected with the same thing, nor the
same man at all times, are in the common
discourses of men of inconstant signification.
For seeing all names are imposed to signify our
conceptions, and all our affections are but
conceptions, when we conceive the same things
differently, we can hardly avoid different naming
of them. For though the nature of that we
conceive, be the same yet the diversity of our
reception of it, in respect of different
constitutions of body and prejudices of opinion,
gives every thing a tincture of our different
passions. And therefore in reasoning a man must
take heed of words which besides the
signification of what we imagine of their nature,
have a signification also of the nature,
disposition, and interest of the speaker such as
are the names of virtues and vices for what one
man calleth wisdom another calleth fear, and one
cruelty what another justice, one prodigality
what another magnanimity, and one gravity what
another stupidity, c. And therefore such names
can never be true grounds of any ratiocination."
(Ch 4, end p. 502)
24- Paradiastole OED 2071 "A figure in which a
favorable turn is given to something unfavorable
by the use of an expression that conveys only
part of the truth... When with a milde
interpretation or speech we colour others or our
own faults, as when we call a subtile man wise, a
bold fellow courageous, or a prodical man
liberal... pradastiole by some learned
Rhetoriticians called a faulty turn of speech,
opposing the truth by false terms and wrong
names. You will not be asked to define this on
an exam!
25- Example from Plato Conversation between
Clessippus and Dionysdorus from Plato's
Euthydemus - You say that you have a dog?Yes, a villain
of one, said Clesippus.And he has
puppies?Yes, and they are very like
himself.And the dog is the father of
them?Yes, he said, I certainly saw him and
the mother of the pupps come together.And is
he not yours?To be sure he is.Then he is a
father, and he is yours, ergo he is your father,
and the puppies are your brothers! - The Point Hobbes believed that fallacious
arguments like these could be avoided, if only we
take care to use words carefully, according to
firm, supportable definitions.
26Hobbes on Values and Reasoning
- Implications for a Philosophy of "Good"
- 1) Evaluative terms like 'good' 'bad' 'better'
'worse' are perspectival. 2) Perspectival terms
cannot be the basis for reasoning.3) Therefore
there can be no reasoning about what is good or
bad or better or worse. - Question How would Aristotle or Plato respond to
Hobbes Argument? Where have we seen a position
like this before? (Thrasymachus in Plato's
Republic, Book I!)
27Hobbes's State of Nature and the Foundations of
Civil Society
- The Question Given Hobbes' account of human
motivation and the desire for power (and fear of
death), how is it possible for human beings to
cooperate with one another in society? How could
we move from a pre-social situation (a state of
nature) into a civil society with laws and
government? What do we gain (and loose) in the
transition from the state of nature to the state
of civil society?
28Hobbess State of Nature
- Rough Equality, No exclusive rights to anything.
- "Nature hath made men so equal, in the faculties
of body and mind' as that though there be found
one man sometimes manifestly stronger in body, or
of quicker mind than another' yet when all is
reckoned together, the difference between man and
man is not so considerable as that one man can
thereupon claim to himself any benefit to which
another may not pretend as well as he. For as to
the strength of body, the weakest has strength
enough to kill the strongest, either by secret
machination, or by confederacy with others that
are in the same danger with himself." (Ch 13 p.
531)
29State of Nature is a State of War
- "And from this equality of ability, ariseth
equality of hope in the attaining of our ends.
And therefore if any two men desire the same
thing, which nevertheless they cannot both enjoy,
they become enemies and in the way to their end,
endeavor to destroy or subdue one another. (Ch
13, p. 531)
30War and the Causes of Quarrel
- "In the nature of man, we find three principle
causes of quarrel. First competition, second,
diffidence, thirdly glory. The first maketh men
invade for gain, the second for safety, the third
for reputation. The first use violence to make
themselves masters of other mens persons, wives,
children, and cattle the second to defend them
the third for trifles as a word, a smile, a
different opinion, and any other sign of
undervalue." (632)
31State of Nature is a State of War
- "Hereby it is manifest that during the time men
live without a common power to keep them in awe,
they are in that condition which is called war
and such a war as is of every man against every
man." (632)
32Why War is Bad
- What is life like in the "state of nature," this
war of "all against all? - "In such condition there is no place for
industry because the fruit thereof is uncertain
and consequently no culture of the earth no
navigation nor use of the commodities that may
be imported by sea no commodious building no
instruments of moving and removing such things as
require much force' no knowledge of the face of
the earth no account of time no arts no
letters no society and which is worst of all,
continual fear and danger of violent death and
the life of man solitery, poor, nasty, brutish,
and short." (632-33)
33Justice in War, and the Prospects for Peace
- In such circumstances all talk of justice is
meaningless, claims Hobbes - "To this war of every man against every man,
this also is consequent. That nothing can be
unjust. The notions of right and wrong, justice
and injustice have there no place. Where there is
no common power, there is no law, where no law no
injustice. Force and fraud are in war the two
cardinal virtues. justice and injustice are none
of the faculties neither of the body nor
mind.(...) - The passions that incline men toward peace are
fear of death, desire of such things as are
necessary to commodious living, and a hope by
their industry to obtain them. And reason
suggesteth convenient articles of peace, upon
which men may be drawn to agreement. These
articles are they which otherwise are called the
Laws of Nature whereof I shall speak more
particularly in the following two chapters. (633)
34COMPETITION, GLORY, AND THE CAUSES OF WARRE!!
- To the State of "Warre" Equality Competition,
"Diffidence," and "Glory" gt WARRE of all
against all. - Competition Limited goods, we all want
'em.Diffidence We all fear for our safety and
mistrust others. - Glory Desire for reputation over-estimating our
own capacities, underestimating costs of war.
35Law and Right
- Natural Laws and Natural RightsRight What you
can do without obstructionLaw A constraint on
liberty. - Hobbesian Right of Nature The liberty to use
one's power to protect one self however one sees
fit to do it. Hobbesian Laws of Nature rules of
reason that tell us to do what it is in our
interest to do.
36Right of Nature in the SON
- Right of Nature In the SON (State of Nature),
everyone has a right to everything. - "And because the condition of man is a condition
of war of everyone against everyone, in which
case everyone is governed by his own reason and
there is nothing he can make use of that may not
be a help unto him in preserving his life against
his enemies, if followeth that in such a
condition everyone has a right to every thing,
even to one anothers' body. And therefore as long
as this natural right of every man to every thing
endureth, there can be no security to any man,
(how strong or wise soever he be), of living out
the time which nature ordinarily alloweth men to
live. And consequently it is a precept, or
general rule of reason that every man ought to
endeavour peace as far as he has hope of
attaining it and when he cannot obtain it, that
he may seek and use all helps and advantages of
war. The first branch of which rule containeth
the first and fundamental law of nature which is
to seek peace and follow it. The second the sum
of the right of nature which is by all means we
can, to defend ourselves.
37Laws of Nature in SON
- First Law of Nature 80 Seek peace.
- Second Law of Nature "...that a man be willing,
when others are so too, as far-forth for peace
and defense of himself he shall think it
necessary, to lay down this right to all things
and be contented with so much liberty aggainst
other men as he would allow other men against
himself. For as long as every man holdeth this
right of doing anthing he liketh, so long are all
men in the condition of war. But if other men
will not lay down their right, as well as he,
then there is no reason for anyone to divest
himself of his for that were to expose himself
to prey (which no man is bound to) rather than to
dispose himself to peace. This is that law of the
Gospel whatsoever you require that others should
do to you, that do ye to them. (636) - Second Law of Nature Be willing to contract to
lay down some of the liberties implicit in right
of nature to seek peace, but only when others are
also willing.
38The Prisoners Dilemma
- The Original Prisoner's Dilemma Avery and Terry
have been captured during the commission of a
minor crime, but the DA knows that they are
guilty of a much more serious crime, which they
committed together. The DA places them in
separate rooms, and says to each one If either
of you individually confesses and turns states
evidence on your accomplice, you will be set
free. But if your accomplice confesses and turns
states evidence while you keep silent, we will
punish you with the full force of the law In
this case, 50 years in prison. If you both turn
states evidence, we will punish you only a little
bit less severely you will each receive 49 years
in prison. However, if neither of you confess,
the most we can give you for your minor crime is
that you will both receive one year in prison.
39The Prisoners Dilemma
- In the table below, outcomes are represented in
"years in prison," with Avery's sentence first
and Terry's sentence later so that 0,50 refers
to the outcome in which Avery goes free (0 years
in prison) and Terry gets a 50 year sentence. -
- Payoffs are represented in years in prison, and
as ordered pairs - Payoff for Avery, Payoff for Terry
Action of Terry ? Action of Avery ? Keep Silent Turn States Evidence
Keep Silent 1,1 Second best for both, and really not that bad. 50,0 Worst for Avery, best for Terry
Turn States Evidence 0,50 Worst for Terry, Best for Avery 49,49 Third best for both, and almost as bad as the worst.
40Prisoners Dilemma The Dominance Argument
- Dominance Argument If each wants to minimize
years spent in prison, then Avery and Terry
should both reason as follows The other person
will either choose to keep silent, or to turn
state's evidence. "cooperate" or to "defect." I
can not influence the choice that person makes--
in this sense, it is as if the choice has already
been made. - Suppose my partner turns states evidence Then
the only outcomes I could achieve are 45 year in
prison (if I also turn states evidence) or 50
years in prison (if I keep silent). Better 45
years in prison than 50 years, so if I knew that
my partner was planning to sell me down the river
I wouldn't want to be a sucker I would want to
turn states evidence too. - Suppose my partner keeps silent Then the
outcomes available to me include freedom (if I
turn evidence) or one year in prison (if I keep
silent too). Freedom is better than a year in
prison, so if I knew that my partner was planning
to keep silent, then it would be better for me to
defect. - It follows that no matter what the other person
does, I will minimize my years in prison if I
turn states evidence. A choice is Dominant just
in case its the best choice no matter what other
people do. So breaking trust is a - Dominant Strategy.
41Prisoners Dilemma Some Terms
- Dominant Strategy A strategic option dominates
alternatives just in case the actor is better off
choosing this option no matter what anyone else
does. - Nash Equilibrium The outcome achieved if each
"player" adopts an individually rational
strategy. Which outcome in the matrix above is
the Nash Equilibrium? - Cooperative Outcome The outcome achieved if
both "players" cooperate with one another rather
than defecting. In the example above, the
outcome in which we both keep silent is the
cooperative outcome. - Pareto Optimum An outcome is a pareto optimum
if there is no alternative outcome that is
preferred by at least one person which is not
worse for some other. - Paradox In the "Prisoner's Dilemma," the Nash
equilibrium is worse for both. So if both
players are rational and make the choice that
is likely to maximize individual benefit, the
outcome is worse - for both.
- In the prisoners dilemma, the rational
outcome is not the pareto optimum. Does this
ever really happen?
42From Prisoners Dilemma to Public Goods to
Commons Tragedy
- ...the coral reefs of the Philippean and Tongan
islands are currently being ravaged by
destructive fishing techniques. Where fishermen
once used lures and traps, they now pour bleach
(i.e. sodium hypochlorite) into the reefs.
Partially asphyxiated, the fish float to the
surface and become easy prey. Unfortunately, the
coral itself suffocates along with the fish, and
the dead reef ceases to be a viable habitat.
("Blast fishing," also widely practiced, consists
of using dynamite rather than bleach.) What goes
through the minds of these fishermen as they
reduce some of the most beautiful habitats in the
world to rubble? Perhaps some of them think,
quite correctly, that if they do not destroy a
given reef, it will shortly be destroyed by
someone else, so they might as well be the ones
to catch the fish. - -David Schmidtz, The Limits of Government.
43From Prisoners Dilemma to Public Goods to
Commons Tragedy
Everyone Else ? Me? Fish with lures and traps Fish with Dynamite and Bleach
Fish with Lures and Traps Resource is preserved, we all catch less fish. Resource is destroyed, and I catch less than anyone else.
Fish with Dynamite and Bleach Resource is preserved (my destruction isnt enough to waste the resource) and I get lots of fish! Resource is destroyed and at least I get as much as everyone else.
44Prisoners Dilemmas and Commons Tragedies
- Thomas Hobbes on Covenants in the State of
Nature (Leviathan, Part I, Chapter 14) - "If a covenant be made, wherein neither of the
parties perform presently, but trust one another
in the condition of mere nature, (which is a
condition of war of every man against every man,)
upon any reasonable suspicion, it is void but if
there be a common power set over them both, with
right and force sufficient to compel performance,
it is not void. For he that performeth first has
no assurance that the other will perform after
because the bonds of words are too weak to bridle
men's ambition, avarice, anger, and other
passions, without the fear of some coercive
power which in the condition of mere nature,
where all men are equal and judges of the
justness of their own fears, cannot possibly be
supposed. And therefore he which performeth
first, does but betray himself to his enemy
contrary to the right (he can never abandon) of
defending his life, and means of living."
45- The Single-Shot Crop Harvesting Dilemma I need
your help to bring in my crop of grain, which
ripens in late summer. You will need my help to
bring in your apples which ripen in early fall.
Can we achieve an agreement to cooperate? Not in
the state of nature, implies Hobbes. - Your choice in late summer Help me or don't help
me. My choice comes in early fall Help you (keep
my "contractual promise") or don't help you
(break my promise). - Payoffs in the matrix below are given in terms of
the rank order of the outcome in question for
Me, and You. So 1,3 means that the box in
question is my first choice outcome and your
third choice outcome.
You? Me? Help me this summer Dont Help me
Help you in Fall 2,1 Second best for me, best you can hope for. This outcome is not achievable, since I wont help you unless Im compensated.
Dont help you in the Fall (Break my promise) 1,3 Best for me, since I gain your cooperation at no cost. (Worst for you, Sucker!) 3,2 Third best for me, since Id rather cooperate than not. Second best for you, since at least youre not exploited by your unscrupulous neighbor.
46The Elemental Form of the Prisoners Dilemma
In the box below, outcomes are identified as 1st,
2nd, 3rd, or 4th choice preferences instead of
quantitative payoffs.
You ? Me? Cooperate Defect
Cooperate 2,2 4,1
Defect 1,4 3,3
47The Elemental Form of the Prisoners Dilemma
- Sadly, the Logic works the same even when the
cooperative benefit is only slightly less than
the exploitation payoff the downside risk that
one might get the sucker payoff if one
cooperates is sufficient to make it narrowly
rational to defect every time. In the matrix
below, payoffs represent the prize or reward that
each person will get
You ? Me? Cooperate Defect
Cooperate 99.99,99.99 0,100
Defect 100,0 .01,.01
48Conditions for a Commons Tragedy
- Nonrivalrous Consumption One persons
consumption of the good does not prevent others
from enjoying it as well. - Non-Excludability Noncontributors (or
noncooperators) cannot be excluded from using the
common. - In fact, these conditions are a matter of
degree. Few resources are purely nonrivalrous or
purely nonexcludable.
49Two Problems that Create a PD or Commons Tragedy
- ASSURANCE PROBLEM Even if people would prefer to
cooperate might not be willing to do so unless
they can be assured that others would also
cooperate. (Shows that good will is not enough) - COORDINATION PROBLEM People might be willing to
cooperate IF ONLY they could coordinate their
actions, but they may be unable to achieve the
necessary coordination to make cooperation
worth-while. (Shows that good will is not enough,
even if people know that others are good willed)
50Hobbes on the Problems in the SON
- No way to coordinate
- no way to cooperate
- no way to promise, even when it would be better
for all - No way to make covenants
- no way to be secure in property
- no way to gain fruits of prudence or creativity
- No possibility for 'Justice' in the SON
"Covenants without the sword are but words..."
(Ch 17)
51The Prisoners Dilemma
- In the table below, outcomes are represented in
"years in prison," with Avery's sentence first
and Terry's sentence later so that 0,50 refers
to the outcome in which Avery goes free (0 years
in prison) and Terry gets a 50 year sentence. -
- Payoffs are represented in years in prison, and
as ordered pairs - Payoff for Avery, Payoff for Terry
Action of Terry ? Action of Avery ? Keep Silent Turn States Evidence
Keep Silent 1,1 Second best for both, and really not that bad. 50,0 Worst for Avery, best for Terry
Turn States Evidence 0,50 Worst for Terry, Best for Avery 45,45 Third best for both, and almost as bad as the worst.
52Hobbes Solution The State as Crime Boss
- What happens to the Prisoners Dilemma if we add
a crime boss who will murder anyone who rats on
another member of the Gang?
Action of Avery ? Action of Terry ? Keep Silent Turn States Evidence
Keep Silent 1,1 Each gets one year in prison. First choice for both! 50,0 dead Bad for Avery who gets 50 yrs. Worst for Terry who gets dead.
Turn States Evidence 0 dead, 50 Bad for Terry who gets 50 yrs. Worst for Avery who gets dead dead, dead Worst for both, since the kingpin rubs them both out.
53On the Hobbesian Solution
- Upshot With a crime kingpin, Keeping silent
becomes a dominant strategy for both, and they
can achieve cooperation. - According to Hobbes, this is what the threat of
legal sanction does for us all. - The function of the state is to hold a sword over
our heads and threaten us into behaving well.
This, he argues, will solve the problem of the
commons! While it is usually a disadvantage to
have someone holding a sword (or a threat) over
your head, Hobbes shows that it can sometimes be
an advantage. - The modern correlate of the Hobbesian view is the
theory that commons problems must be solved by
restrictive legislation. - Sadly, this may sometimes be the only way to go.
- Covenants without the sword are but words,
- with no strength to secure a man at all.
-Thomas Hobbes
54Hobbes and the Foole
- 1) Hobbes urges, contrary to the Foole, that
justice not contrary to reason2) He argues that
covenant breakers must be excluded from
society - QUESTION How can people lay down their rights to
a sovereign? All must act at ONCE, else it's no
good. (Coordination and assurance problems arise
here too.)
55From Hobbes to Locke
- John Locke Second Treatise of Government
- Locke's State of Nature1) State of "Perfect
Freedom," but within the "law of nature."2)
State of "natural equality." Locke refers not
only to (rough) equality of abilities and
capacities, but also to the fact that all are
equally bound by the law of nature. - AN OBJECTION TO HOBBES Without initial honesty
and truth telling, we can't leave SON. Once we
GET a sovereign, Hobbes has no problem, but
before the sovereign, we can't contract. - The Upshot We cant make a social contract
unless one is already in place. - LOCKE'S SOLUTION "Truth and keeping faith
belongs to men as men, and not as members of
society."(745)
56(No Transcript)