As
the gap between rich and poor widens inexorably, I'm puzzled by the
tolerance shown by poor humans towards the wealth possessed by the super-rich.
We
need a word that means ‘rational aversion to other humans living a far
more comfortable lifestyle than your own which you would like to enjoy
yourself.’ Perhaps R.A.I.G. (Rational Aversion to Income Gaps). Currently our only option is the demeaning, pejorative term for a Deadly Sin, the Green-Eyed Monster, ‘Envy’.
Adam Smith, Kirkcaldy-born Hero of Capitalist Theory |
Even
social fairness advocate John Rawls thinks envy is horrid and undermines the
self-respect of the poor, thus posing a threat to societal stability. But
why so? It takes self-respect and a sensitivity
to human dignity to recognise the absurdity of over-payment for doing nothing useful.
So
I’m thrilled to discover that Aristotle is also puzzled. He notes the absence of a Greek word for
people who fail to feel appropriate envy of the undeserving plutocrat. There wasn’t even a word in ancient Greek for that kind of incomprehension of economic reality.
In his ‘Golden Mean’ table in the Eudemian Ethics he lists twelve virtues. Each has two
correlative vices caused by excess or deficiency. Courage in excess is recklessness, but in deficiency it is cowardice. Friendliness in excess
becomes brown-nosing, but if deficient just means you're rude.
Nemesis--Not Happy in 2016 |
Nemesis--Rational Aversion to Nasty Rich (with Good Luck) |
But there is some good news: ancient Greek does have a solution to my R.A.I.G problem. In
Aristotle’s table, the rational and appropriate level of envy, a commendable sensitivity to inequality and desire to erase it,
my cacophonous proposed virtue of R.A.I.G., is strong, holds a hint that the world can be changed, and rolls
off the tongue: it is NEMESIS.
Giving Eitner Lecture on February 18 |
I suspect that Smith would exclude from the class of 'those who are really entitled to all the superiority they possess' people who benefit from 'over-payment for doing nothing useful'.
ReplyDeleteThanks for a your interesting post, on a subject I know little about (not even the righteous indignation). I'm a bit confused by the last sentence (In Aristotle's table ...) - is it just me or is there something missing there?
ReplyDelete